Willie Lee Stewart v. United States

275 F.2d 617
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedMarch 30, 1960
Docket14991_1
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 275 F.2d 617 (Willie Lee Stewart v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willie Lee Stewart v. United States, 275 F.2d 617 (D.C. Cir. 1960).

Opinions

This case comes to us for the third time after three trials in the District Court before three different judges and three different juries, and after two earlier appeals to this court. This is the second review en banc by this court.1

In April 1953, Stewart was indicted for first degree murder and robbery of his alleged victim. The evidence of the robbery and killing in the record now before us is the same in all significant respects as in two prior trials and shows beyond any doubt, as this court has always acknowledged, that Stewart committed the acts charged.2

Harry Honikman, age 65, operated a small corner grocery store in Washington where on March 12, 1953' late in the evening, Stewart entered and made purchases. When the proprietor told Stewart it was closing time the latter drew a pistol and said “Okay, this is it,” and demanded the contents of the cash register. He then shot Honikman, killing him instantly. The wife and daughter of the deceased witnessed the shooting. Their positive identification of Stewart was first made in a police line-up and has never been shaken in the course of three trials.3 Stewart then took about $400 from the cash register and fled. Apart from identification by the eye witnesses, Stewart’s gun was identified as the murder weapon by expert testimony. Stewart was apprehended two days later and arrested while attempting to elude police pursuit. He had been hiding meanwhile.

In the first two trials, in 1953 and 1956, Stewart did not take the stand. His principal defense in those trials was, as in the trial now under review, that he was suffering from a mental disease or defect when he committed the crime. In the third trial, unlike the two earlier trials, Stewart took the stand and his testimony, if it can be so described, is gibberish without meaning. It is such that it permits of only one of two conclusions: either he was suffering from a grave mental disease or defect during the trial, in which case he could not be [619]*619legally tried at all, or he was malingering • — staging a show of mental aberration to influence the judge and jury.

In these circumstances it becomes necessary to deal separately with the mental condition of Stewart on March 12, 1953, when the crime was committed, and his mental condition in 1959, when he was tried for the third time. The Government affirmatively attacked appellant’s conduct on the witness stand as deliberate malingering.

Stewart has been in custody since his arrest in 1953 and by direction of the court has been in St. Elizabeths Hospital for long periods of observation and examination to determine his mental condition first as of March 1953 and second as to his capacity to be tried. The criteria for these evaluations are, of course, not the same. Carter v. United States, 1956, 102 U.S.App.D.C. 227, 252 F.2d 608; Lyles v. United States, 1957, 103 U.S.App.D.C. 22, 254 F.2d 725, certiorari denied, 1958, 356 U.S. 961, 78 S.Ct. 997, 2 L.Ed.2d 1067.

That every member of this court has previously acknowledged that there is no question but that Stewart committed the criminal acts charged does not alter our obligation to examine the record be-for us as to all the issues. The very purpose of a new trial on each occasion was to afford him all the procedural safeguards guaranteed to every accused. But once having scrutinized the present record with the degree of care appropriate in a capital case, and having satisfied ourselves that there is no doubt, reasonable or otherwise, that Stewart committed the acts charged and that he was afforded a fair trial, our detailed analysis of those issues on prior occasions and the unanimous conclusions concerning them render it unnecessary to discuss anew whether Stewart indeed committed the acts. Now, as at all times previously, we are all fully satisfied on this score. We therefore address ourselves to what has been called Stewart’s “principal defense,” his claim of insanity, and to related issues.

(l)

The evidence bearing on the defense of insanity at the time of the crime falls into three categories: (1) lay testimony as to Stewart’s behavior and activities on the day of the crime; (2) lay testimony as to Stewart’s conduct, behavior and mental condition over a period of time preceding the crime, including two terms of military service; (3) expert medical testimony based on examination, observation and on facts established by competent evidence, facts deducible from competent evidence and on facts assumed to have been established.

The Government produced James Hamilton, a friend and neighbor of Stewart, who had known him for six years; he testified that on the day of the crime he and Stewart along with others played cards at Stewart’s home most of that day, the game starting before the crime and continuing into the evening after the robbery and killing. That the acts charged were committed by Stewart during an absence from the card game was, of course, unknown to Hamilton or the other players. During the early evening Stewart showed Hamilton an Iver Johnson pistol which the latter examined and found loaded. At the trial this pistol was identified by ballistic experts as the murder weapon. Stewart rejoined the card game following the interval during which the crime was committed and continued to play until 2 A.M. the next morning. Hamilton said Stewart’s conduct and actions both before- and after his return to the game late in the evening were normal and not in any way unusual, excited or out of the ordinary.

Stewart’s history of prior conduct was testified to in his behalf by his wife, several relatives and several friends. Together they portrayed Stewart as a man of maniacal tendencies, given to outbursts of violence, throwing and smashing property in senseless rages, maltreating his wife and children generally, beating his wife during a pregnancy; it was claimed that he attempted to shoot her, attempted to throw his child out a win[620]*620dow when the child annoyed him, attempted or threatened to put the child in a stove. His military record included two terms, the second one ending in a suspended dishonorable discharge after a suspended sentence on conviction for assault by a military court. His Army I.Q. test showed a score of 63 on the verbal sub-test and 76 on the performance sub-test with a combined score of 65. Army medical reports yielded no evidence of neurosis or psychosis.

There was no record of any charges made to police by Stewart’s wife or others by reason of the alleged abnormal and brutal conduct described by his relatives and friends. On the contrary, his employer said he was an excellent employee and that as a worker he “can’t be beat.”

The medical expert called by the defense was Dr. Ernest Williams, who first examined Stewart while he was in custody three months after the crime, seeing him for about two hours. This witness found Stewart in a depressed state and was unable to form an opinion as to the presence or absence of a mental disease or defect. However, accepting as true the history of violence described by Stewart’s wife, relatives and friends, Dr. Williams reached the conclusion that Stewart was suffering from manic depressive psychosis when he committed the crime. Later, in 1958, Dr. Williams again examined Stewart and found evidence of symptoms of schizophrenic psychosis. Dr.

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Willie Lee Stewart v. United States
275 F.2d 617 (D.C. Circuit, 1960)

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Bluebook (online)
275 F.2d 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willie-lee-stewart-v-united-states-cadc-1960.