Voice v. Commonwealth

145 S.W.2d 45, 284 Ky. 416, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 515
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 15, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 145 S.W.2d 45 (Voice v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Voice v. Commonwealth, 145 S.W.2d 45, 284 Ky. 416, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 515 (Ky. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Sims, Commissioner

Affirming.

Appellant, Jesse Voice, alias Frank Vitale, was *418 convicted of the crime of assault with an offensive weapon with intent to rob as denounced in Section 1160, Kentucky Statutes, and his punishment was fixed at confinement for 21 years in the penitentiary. In seeking to reverse the judgment he assigns two errors: 1. The court admitted incompetent evidence against him; 2. the verdict is flagrantly against the evidence on the question of insanity.

Jesse Voice is a Jewish boy, 18 years of age, who does not deny the commission of the crime for which he was convicted and his sole defense was insanity. The evidence shows his father is an optometrist in New York City and while appellant worked in his father’s store he was entrusted with making bank deposits. He pocketed these deposits and wrote the amounts thereof in the pass book. After thus accumulating about $300, he stole some gold (used in making rims for spectacles) from his father’s shop. He then started by bus to New Orleans to visit March Gras, but stopped at Huntington, W. Va., where he registered at one of its best hotels under the name of Prank Vitale. Appellant supplied himself most bountifully with champagne and whiskey, and while visiting the Continental Club in Chesapeake, Ohio, just across the river from Huntington, he met a prostitute about his age and brought her to his hotel where she remained for four days.

In the course of a week his funds were running low, as was his supply of champagne and liquor, and he tried to sell at a Huntington pawn shop some of the gold he had stolen. Upon information from this shop that it did not buy such gold but that he could sell it in Baltimore, he mailed twenty ounces of gold to the address of the Baltimore firm given him by the pawn shop, directing it to mail him check in payment therefor to the Kentucky Hotel in Louisville, Ky. He next purchased a pistol in Huntington, then went to Ashland, Ky., some fourteen miles distant, and about dark located a liquor store in which there were no customers and with only a woman in charge. He asked this woman if she had champagne, and when she replied in the affirmative, he requested her to write the names of the brands on a paper for him. While she was .thus engaged, he drew his pistol on her, forced her to open the cash register from which he took all the money, but left a check, hit her over the head with the pistol and departed.

*419 After this robbery he went to the nearby beer saloon of Ned Howard, wliere he had bought several drinks of beer immediately preceding the robbery, and had a cab called for himself. He directed the driver to take him to Huntington, but instead of going to his hotel, he left the cab in an outlying district. The next day in robbing a newspaper office in Ironton, Ohio, he was captured by the police of that town. Soon after his arrest, appellant stated he intended to plead insanity, that he could get out of the case that way — that he knew all the angles. When inquiry was made of him why he did not rob the Continental Club and why he robbed a nice Jewish woman and hit her on the head, it is testified his replies to these questions were: “Yes, rob the Continental and get shot in three or four places,” and, “Well, everything is fair in a hold-up”.

Appellant’s history is that he began to steal as a child of 5, but that he only stole from members of his family. He was unusually devoted to his mother, who. died when he was twelve years old, and after her death he began to stammer and became difficult to control. He went as far as the third year in high school, wanted to specialize in chemistry, but his father insisted upon him becoming an optometrist. From his father and stepmother he stole money and jewelry, the latter he disposed of in pawn shops for only a small fraction of its value. He ran away from home on several occasions while in high school, once going to the west coast and on another occasion to Texas. It was both troublesome and expensive for his father to go after him when he would run away, and after several such experiences, the father committed appellant to the Brooklyn State Hospital on May 13, 1939. He remained there under observation until June 9, 1939, when the medical staff of the hospital, composed of five doctors who are supposed to be experts on mental diseases, pronounced appellant a maladjusted individual, but sane, and discharged him from the hospital.

On his trial four medical experts residing in New York testified by interrogatories. In answer to a long hypothetical question embracing practically all the facts detailed above, each of these doctors pronounced appellant insane. Dr. Beaser, a psychiatrist, and assistant superintendent of the State Hospital at Huntington, testified in person for appellant, stating he was suffering *420 from dementia praecox — simple type, into which, class most of the tramps, vagabonds, hobos and prostitutes belong; that while appellant might know right from wrong he could not resist following the wrong impulse. In Dr. Reaser’s opinion appellant was of unsound mind.

Dr. Stone testified in person for the Commonwealth, and in answer to practically the same hypothetical question asked the other doctors he gave as his opinion that appellant was sane. It is argued that Dr. Stone’s testimony should have been excluded on appellant’s motion because he failed to qualify as an expert on mental diseases. Dr. Stone testified he was not a specialist on mental diseases, but that he had training in that line of work in medical college and had three years experience with mental cases in hospitals at Cleveland and Detroit. In Bishop v. Com., 109 Ky. 558, 60 S. W. 190, 22 Ky. Law Rep. 1161, it was written that the doctors who were attempting to qualify as experts had no experience whatever in the treatment of mental diseases, and as far as that record showed neither of them had ever seen an insane person, and the court rejected their testimony. While the testimony of the doctor was properly rejected in Abbott v. Com., 107 Ky. 624, 55 S. W. 196, 198, 21 Ky. Law Rep. 1372, because he was not qualified to testify on mental diseases, it was said:

“The testimony of Dr. Wright was properly rejected, as it did not appear that he had given the subject of insanity a sufficient study to entitle him to speak as an expert on the hypothetical case put to him. It is not necessary that the witness should claim to be an expert. Any practicing physician, doing a general practice, who has studied the subject of diseases of the mind, with other forms of disease, may testify on the hypothetical case, on the ground that, as insanity is a disease, one who is skilled in detecting and treating diseases is competent to give an opinion, the extent of his learning and experience going alone to his credibility. 2 Bish. Cr. Proc., Section 687.”

Under this rule Dr. Stone qualified to testify on mental diseases, even though he did not claim to be an expert thereon, since he had studied the subject in medical college and had three years’ experience in that line of work in hospitals in two large cities. See Robertson v. Com., 275 Ky. 8, 120 S. W. (2d) 680.

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Related

Grant v. Commonwealth
196 S.W.2d 601 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1946)
Hall v. Commonwealth
182 S.W.2d 890 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1944)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 S.W.2d 45, 284 Ky. 416, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/voice-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1940.