United States v. Harry Wayne Parks

460 F.2d 736, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 9794
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 2, 1972
Docket71-1427
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 460 F.2d 736 (United States v. Harry Wayne Parks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Harry Wayne Parks, 460 F.2d 736, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 9794 (5th Cir. 1972).

Opinion

JOHN R. BROWN, Chief Judge:

On March 1, 1969, Harry Wayne Parks forged a United States Government V.A. check and received $136 lawfully payable to Herman E. Walker. His picture, his handwriting and his presence at the indicated address all confirmed that he had done the deed. The only defense was a lack of criminal responsibility due to mental illness — a defense which the jury was disinclined to accept. On review of the record, how *738 ever, we conclude that the implicit finding of sanity is so contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence that the District Court erred in refusing to grant a new trial. F.R.Crim.P. 33.

The Government’s case was well presented. It adequately demonstrated that Parks was living at 2611 Tyson Avenue in Tampa, Florida. Payee Walker had previously lived at that address. A Y.A. check payable to Walker had been sent to the Tyson address by mistake. Parks had taken the check to a local grocery store, stood before a Dubl-Check camera, endorsed the check with the name Herman E. Walker, given his address and received the $136.

The defense was insanity and the strategy was well developed by court-appointed counsel. The defense would first show, and then the prosecution would have to negate beyond a reasonable doubt, 1 that at the time Parks committed the offense in question he was [i] by reason of mental disease or illness either [ii] unable to appreciate the wrongfulness of his actions or [iii] unable to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law. See, Blake v. United States, 5 Cir. (en banc), 1969, 407 F.2d 908. 2

To open its case, the defense presented the deposition of Dr. Glen, a psychiatrist and professor of psychiatry from Dallas, who had treated the defendant when he had been committed to a mental institution after an adjudication of incompetency in 1961 — eight years before the asserted crime. Dr. Glen testified that Parks was then suffering from “chronic paranoid schizophrenia,” a psychosis in which the person has “lost their ability to measure reality. * * * To put it in layman’s language, he was crazy.” Parks’ schizophrenia was the “worst type to have, a continuous type that there is no real successful treatment of this kind of illness.” It would be “very surprising” if Parks could have been recovered from this illness in 1969. More importantly, though Parks was released from the mental institution in 1962, Dr. Glen warned 3 that periods of marked stress would trigger a recurrence of the psychotic syndrome and that Parks would again be unable to conform his conduct to reality. (TR 135-37).

Thereafter, defense counsel, posited to the doctor — as a hypothetical — the facts *739 and circumstances later proved by lay witnesses producing a period of tremendous stress for the defendant and asked whether that stress would be sufficient to precipitate a psychotic episode. The psychiatrist answered that it would.

At this point the defense had established that Parks was suffering from mental disease which, if triggered by periods of marked stress, would manifest itself in the patient’s inability to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law. Next, five lay witnesses testified about the tremendous stress — the existence of which was of critical significance to Dr. Glen’s conclusions — to which defendant had been subjected just prior to the forgery episode. Parks’ 16-year-old stepson had suffered a brain hemorrhage and the doctors had informed the Parks that a second hemorrhage was inevitable and would be fatal. The child sustained brain damage as a result of the hemorrhage and suddenly forgot how to read and write. As a result, the wife suffered a nervous breakdown and was committed to a mental institution. Upon her release, she became an alcoholic and, by her own confession, began conducting herself in something less than faithful fashion. Parks was forced to look after the children, and serve as both a mother and father to them. Meanwhile, one child ran away from home and another in the military was ordered to Viet Nam.

As Dr. Glen had warned to expect, physical manifestations of the schizophrenic syndrome he had described began to appear and were noticed by neighbors. The witnesses testified that Parks was usually a happy-go-lucky life-of-the-party type of person. (TR 180). He became withdrawn and introverted. He would no longer respond even to a friendly “Hello.” (TR 199). He would spend hours at a time sitting in a tree house he had built for the children “just talking to himself.” (TR 165). He became a religious fanatic, condemning everything anybody did. (TR 213). He did strange things completely out of character. (TR 206-07). He began to show signs of “pathological jealousy” and once exploded, striking his wife and breaking her jaw. (TR 210). In the words of a neighbor, “He just flipped completely.” (TR 208). The neighbor continued, “He got withdrawn, and then he got bad tempered and quick and irritable, and then he started going off in a world of his own all the time.” (TR 205-06). “He just wasn’t the same person.” (TR 204).

The symptoms of schizophrenia described by the doctor, which could be expected to be triggered by periods of great stress, had, as Dr. Glen had predicted, apparently begun to manifest themselves.

But the defense did not stop there. A second psychiatrist, Dr. Hardin, was called, this one court-appointed. Dr. Hardin had examined the defendant after the “crime” and his conclusion was unequivocal — “In my opinion, in and about February of 1969 when he committed this offense, I must, by a process of inference, be of the opinion that he was * * * not able by reason of mental disorder and disease to conform his conduct to the law.” 4

That Parks had established a strong case suggesting legal insanity could not seriously be disputed, and it was certainly enough to put a heavy burden on the Government to establish sanity beyond a reasonable doubt. 5

The Government obviously realized this for at this point it presented *740 its rebuttal testimony. The Government had not been satisfied with Dr. Hardin’s conclusions so it had requested that Parks be ordered to present himself for psychiatric examination by a doctor of its choosing. It is the testimony of this third psychiatrist, Dr. Coffer, which, the Government argues, created the jury question on sanity. For, the Government urges, if this testimony were believed and the testimony of the defense psychiatrists and lay witnesses were not credited, its theory that Parks was, as Judge Ingraham so aptly characterized the theory from the bench during oral argument, “temporarily sane” 6 at the time he committed the offense, would be established. On close reading, however, we are convinced that Dr. Coffer’s testimony only reinforced the defense claim that Parks was, by reason of mental illness or disease, unable to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law.

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460 F.2d 736, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 9794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-harry-wayne-parks-ca5-1972.