Court Opinion

ID: 9610847
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-22 03:48:03.923729+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:03:05.480344
License: Public Domain

Chief Justice Sharp
dissenting:
I concur in the majority’s conclusion that the trial court correctly ruled: (1) that on 30 October 1972 defendant was competent to stand trial upon the five indictments which respectively charged him with the first degree murder of his wife Catherine and their four children, Pamela, aged six; Albert, Jr., aged five; Dawn, aged three; and Josephine, aged seven months; (2) that the statements which defendant made to hospital personnel in the emergency room on 2 December 1971 were admissible in evidence; and (3) that defendant’s motion for a directed verdict of not guilty was properly overruled. I dissent from the holding that the judge correctly charged the jury with reference to insanity and mental disease as it bears upon an accused’s guilt of murder in the first degree.
*574Plenary undisputed evidence established that on 1 December 1971, the date of the homicides for which defendant now stands convicted, he was and had been suffering from the diagnosed, serious mental disease of paranoid schizophrenia, which was then in a state of exacerbation. This evidence was for the jury’s consideration in determining whether defendant had proved to the satisfaction of the jury that he was insane as defined by this Court and therefore completely exempt from criminal responsibility for the homicides of which he has been convicted. The trial judge purported to charge the jury to this effect. However, he failed to charge the jury that this evidence was also for consideration in determining whether the State had proved beyond a reasonable doubt the elements of specific intent to kill, after premeditation and deliberation, essential to conviction for murder in the first degree. In my judgment, defendant is entitled to a new'trial for error of both commission and omission in the judge’s instructions to the jury.
. My views with reference to this case are those stated by former Chief Justice Bobbitt at the Fall Term 1974 in an opinion which was not adopted by the Court. With minor variations the statement of facts and propositions of law contained in this dissent are taken from that opinion, in which I concurred when it was tendered to the Court. In the main, the variations herein are necessary to make the phraseology of a majority opinion conform to that of a dissent and to set forth the facts, insofar as possible, in chronological order.
That the statement of facts in this dissent and in the majority opinion contain duplications is regrettable. However, consideration of the question whether the court should have instructed the jury to consider evidence of defendant’s mental disease on the issue of premeditation and deliberation requires detailed consideration of the evidence relating to defendant’s mental disease and his abnormal behavior which was characteristic of the disease. To indicate as clearly as possible the basis of the legal opinions herein expressed, in the facts set out below, I have endeavored to narrate defendant’s story chronologically as it emerged from all the evidence.
Defendant was born on 14 August 1944. In September 1965, while in military service, he married his wife Catherine, who was 15 or 16 years old and a resident of Goldsboro. At that time she was expecting a child, which, defendant told his mother, was his.
*575In 1965, while defendant was on active duty in Vietnam, he experienced his first acute schizophrenic reaction and fired an M-16 rifle into a headquarters tent occupied by troops. He was sent by plane to Walter Reed Hospital in Washington, D. C. On 1 June 1966 he was returned to his unit in Vietnam. In 1968 he was in Womack Hospital at Fort Bragg for six months. There he “was diagnosed schizophrenia, and received a medical discharge from the service.” In 1969 he returned to Goldsboro where he worked intermittently at various jobs. Frequently he “was out sick.” In 1970 he was treated as an outpatient at Seymour Johnson Air Force Base Clinic.
In 1971 defendant, his wife, and their five children were living in Lincoln Homes, a low-rent housing project in Golds-boro. In July 1971 defendant’s mother-in-law heard him tell Catherine that four of the five children were not his. (As noted in the majority opinion, nothing in the evidence substantiates defendant’s belief that his wife was unfaithful.)
On or about 1 September 1971 defendant arrived at the home of his mother, Mrs. Suevonia Stewart, in Kansas City. With him was his four-year-old son, Suevonia (Boney), his mother’s namesake. Two weeks before he had telephoned Mrs. Stewart four times in one day to tell her that he was coming. Upon his arrival defendant was “very frightened and disturbed.” He “put the baby down,” closed the door and a Venetian blind, and said “that someone was after him to kill him and the baby; that he just did make it.” He asked her to take him to Richard Gebur Air Base, saying: “There’s a plane there that is going to take me directly to Thailand.” He said he was going to Thailand “to keep those people from killing me. . . . I’ve got to get'away fast before they get here.” All of this convérsation occurred within an hour or so after he arrived at Mrs. Stewart’s house.
Defendant was so determined that she took him in her automobile to Richard Gebur Air Base. There they learned that no planes were “fixing to leave,” and defendant said: “They must be gone; they are not coming back; we’ll have to go back to the house and I’ll make other arrangements.” He was still very frightened when they got back home. He asked her not to turn on any lights, to make sure the doors were locked, and for all the family to stay in the same room. No one went to bed that night. She slept in a chair, holding the baby in her lap. Her younger daughter sat by her. Defendant sat across from them *576and said, “[d]on’t make a sound because those people are all around the house.” She knew he was sick and tried in every way to comfort and reassure him. She told him her dog would bark if anyone came around the house; that no one was going to bother him. She “kept talking to him this way all night and finally got him kind of calmed down.”
There were other nights when he could not sleep. He would not stay in a room by himself but stayed with his mother. He was afraid “something or some people from outer space were coming.” One night he reported to his mother that [they] came after [him] and they wanted to talk to [him]” but that he refused to talk to them at night. Another night when Mrs. Stewart woke up, defendant was sitting over her, staring down on her “wildly and frightened looking.” At that time she had the feeling he was about to harm her. When she asked what was wrong, he replied: “You’ve suffered so much in raising us up; now you still have to go to work.” His mother explained that she was happy; that she still had her health and strength and was self-supporting; that she thanked God for letting her raise her children, and that she hoped he would raise his in the manner she had raised him.
She took him to the airport at least three more times because he kept insisting that a plane was supposed to take him to Vietnam. He was “in such a state of mind and such a rage” that she “saw no other way but to put him in the car and carry him out there.”
Defendant did not leave the home alone. Although employed, Mrs. Stewart did not go to work regularly because defendant would cry like a small child and beg her not to leave because he was afraid to stay at home. On the days she worked, she would leave Boney with a neighbor in the same apartment.
About a week after his arrival, Mrs. Stewart first took defendant to the Veterans Hospital in Kansas City, but he became frightened and would not stay. He said the people in the waiting room were some of the “people from outer space.” He returned to his mother’s apartment where he stayed until, at his request, he was admitted to this hospital on September 17. His medical history at that time shows he was under the delusion he was being controlled by a cat. There he was rediag-nosed “schizophrenia, paranoid type.”
*577His.mother saw him frequently while he was a patient in the hospital. After he had been in the hospital about fourteen days, he called her to come for him. She did not go because a nurse also called and asked her not to come. However, upon her return from a trip to a grocery store, she found' defendant at her home. He had taken “unauthorized leave” from the hospital because (he said) he wanted “to go to Walter Reed where [he could] be near Catherine and the children.” The next morning, 30 September 1971, she took him to the airport where he obtained passage to Washington on a military flight. Defendant left the; child Boney with his mother. He had previously told her he had brought that child with him because Boney was the only one who could help him; that Boney took care of him.
In Washington, Walter Reed Hospital refused to admit him but referred him to a VA Hospital there. However, nothing in the record suggests that he attempted to secure admission to this hospital.
When Mrs. Stewart learned by a telephone call to-Walter Reed Hospital that defendant was not there, she made two calls to Goldsboro, one to Goldsboro’s Chief of Police, Roy Renfro, and the other to Mary Jane Harper, the occupant of the apartment adjoining defendant’s. She told Chief Renfro to watch out for defendant; that he was mentally disturbed; that he had left the hospital without the doctor’s permission and to lock him up “if there was anything wrong.” Renfro promised to call Catherine and let her know defendant was on his way home, but told her “he couldn’t lock Albert up because Albert hadn’t done anything.”
Mrs. Harper testified that Mrs. Stewart told her she thought defendant was “on his way back home and if he comes there and you hear anything over there you call the police. I’ve already called the police there, and I’m telling you and I have wrote Catherine a letter because I told him all of those children could not be light.” According to Mrs. Harper, all the,children were light like defendant and his mother except the little boy, Albert, Jr., who was darker like Catherine.
Two days later when Mrs. Stewart reached defendant by telephone, he told her that because Walter Reed did not have a bed for him he “had come home”; that “he and Catherine had made everything all right and he wanted to come back to Kansas City and buy a home.” Thereafter Mrs. Stewart talked with *578Catherine, with whom she “had a wonderful relationship,” more often than with Albert. Her last conversation with Catherine “was about a week before December 1, 1971.”
Mrs. Stewart testified that none of the children had a lighter complexion than either defendant or herself; that defendant “never told [her] that none of the children were his except the one he brought out to Kansas City”; that he did say “he wasn’t sure about Albert, Jr., his second child.” She reprimanded him and refused to “listen to that conversation.” She told him she “didn’t want him being like so many other young men. They wait, they love their wife to death until they get pregnant and then they want to deny their children.” Thereafter, defendant made no other statement to her “about not being the father of any of the other children.”
Mrs. Stewart’s testimony on direct examination concludes as follows: Based upon her observations of defendant during the entire time he was visiting her in Kansas City — before he went to the VA Hospital there, while he was in the VA Hospital, and after he left the VA Hospital — it is her opinion that he “didn’t know right from wrong at that time . . . that he was not acting in his right mind . . . that he was insane.”
In October 1971 and thereafter defendant went to Seymour Johnson Air Force Base Clinic at Goldsboro several times. Being on “temporary retirement,” he was entitled to and did receive medications at this clinic. However, because of his continued failure to keep appointments, the clinic refused to give him any more time. In the opinion of Dr. Ladislaw Peter, the psychiatrist who is the Superintendent of Cherry Hospital, defendant’s condition “was getting gradually worse and worse” after his return to Goldsboro in October 1971.
On Wednesday, 1 December 1971, between 11 and 11:30 a.m., George Uzell, a neighbor, saw Catherine run from the Cooper apartment. Defendant caught her,- threw her to the ground, beat her with his fists, and pulled her back into the apartment. Shortly thereafter, Uzell heard “some screams” and noises “like somebody knocking over furniture or something.” He figured it was “a family problem” and did nothing to help Mrs. Cooper. Nor did he call the police. About 5 p.m. Catherine ran from her apartment to the front door of Mrs. Harper’s apartment. When Mrs. Harper went to the door defendant pulled Catherine back, threw her down on the ground, and was “mashing her in the *579bosom.” Catherine called out, “Miss Mary, call the police,” and defendant said, “Yes, Miss Mary, call the police and call the rescue squad.” Mrs. Harper requested the operator to send the police to her address, and the operator said, “all right.” When she went back to the door, neither Catherine nor defendant was in sight. The police never came to Mrs. Harper’s house. About 7 p.m. Mrs. Harper knocked on the door of the Cooper apartment. When she identified herself, defendant said, “Miss Mary, I can’t see you now.” At that time she heard no sound in the apartment. The radio in the Cooper apartment, “one of those stereos,” played all during the night of December 1.
The radio was still playing on Thursday, December 2, about 5 p.m. when defendant came over to the Harper apartment, and called a cab. At that time he “was nervous and trembling and real wet with perspiration.” As he turned to go, he said, “Cat is sick.” When Mrs. Harper asked for details, defendant did not answer. The cab arrived, defendant went back into Ms apartment, got his coat, and left in the cab. About 7 p.m. Mrs. Harper went to the Cooper apartment. No one answered her knock and the door was locked. She then called Mrs. Jackson, Catherine’s mother, to come over and check on Catherine, that defendant had said she was sick. When Mrs. Jackson and her sons arrived at the Cooper apartment, they were met by a policeman. (A description of the situation they found in the Cooper apartment is deferred.)
Nothing in the evidence discloses the whereabouts or activity of defendant on December 2 from 5 p.m. until about 8 p.m. when Sergeant Whaley of the Goldsboro police force found him in the locker room of a bowling alley after having been advised of the presence of a sick person there. Defendant appeared to be “in a nervous condition.” He had “a slipper on one foot and a shoe on the other.” Although defendant insisted that “nothing was wrong,” Whaley thought he needed to: see a doctor and asked if he could take him to the hospital. Defendant said, “No, I want to go home, that’s what I want to do.” Asked if he “had a knife or anything on him,” defendant replied, “No,” and gave Whaley permission to “pat him down.” Whaley found no knife but felt something on defendant’s stomach which defendant referred to as “a package.” He told Whaley he could not see the “package,” that he was going to deliver it on Lincoln Drive. Whaley, apprehensive that the package contained sticks of dynamite, telephoned Lieutenant Harvell to *580meet him at Jefferson and Ash Streets. Defendant got into the car “of his own free will and accord” after Whaley told him he “was going to take him home.” Whaley drove to the intersection and was met by Harvell, who had known defendant. At Harvell’s request, defendant opened his shirt. Three table legs were taped to his stomach. Defendant ripped off the tape and the table legs were removed. Each was about an inch in diameter and about eleven or twelve inches long.
Leaving Harvell, Whaley took defendant to the Wayne County Memorial Hospital between 8 and 8:30 p.m. Upon arrival, defendant “was nervous and shaking.” Every once in a while he “would just shake all over.” During the time defendant was in the hospital, he was not under arrest. Whaley took him there to find out what was wrong with him. He thought defendant “might be on drugs or something like that.” Whaley observed defendant during six or eight periods of shaking; Harvell, during two. According to Harvell, “Overall, taking his overall behavior, he acted like a man not in his right mind.” When he was shaking and staring into space, he did not appear to be in his right mind. At other times he did. After defendant was received in the emergency room, Whaley had no further conversation or contact with defendant, but he observed him occasionally through the open door to the room in which he had been placed.
In the emergency room defendant told Mrs. Bass, the nurse in charge, that he needed help. He told her to “call the police”; that “something awful is wrong at my house”; that “he had destroyed his wife and children”; that he “beat them.” When Mrs. Bass talked to defendant, “he acted relaxed at times; at times he was shaking almost over his entire body and was staring about in the room.” In the treatment room, he looked “place to place and from person to person” for ten to fifteen minutes. On more than one occasion, defendant said, “I don’t understand; I don’t know why I did it.” When questioned, he “started shaking and looking from place to place again.”
Defendant also made these statements to Mrs. Bass: “I was walking around like a normal man listening to the radio. Then I started dancing around like a wild man. I destroyed my family. . . . The music gave me sensations which told me my family was people from the moon to kill me.” All during the time defendant was in the emergency room (almost three hours) he “was in certain intervals shaking, and glancing from place to place.” *581Defendant’s statements to Mrs. Bass were “in sketches sort of” over a period of 30 to 45 minutes.
About 9 p.m. when Isaiah Williams, Jr., a medical attendant, asked him how he was feeling, defendant said he did not know and “started trembling and shaking and looking all around the room.” Later, defendant told him he needed help to try to make up for what he had done, “maybe to make things right again”; that he had killed his wife and children; that the reason he did it “was sensations from the music going to his brain.”
During Williams’s first conversation with defendant on December 2, defendant “talked only as if he was in a total state of confusion and he knew nothing that had happened.” He was in a nervous state, shaking, trembling, and looking all about the room, and reeling off, “I need help; I need help; I need help.” After an hour or two Williams thought defendant seemed a little calmer, but he was still trembling as from fright. In answer to Williams’s questions as to why he did it, defendant said, “It was sensations going to my brain, music from the radio giving these sensations.” At one point defendant said that “they wanted him to dress like an Indian and fight the Americans.” After making this statement, defendant dropped back into his confused state and did not respond to Williams again.
Dr. Warren Parmelee, the physician on duty, in the emergency ward, is a medical doctor who had had “some studies, in psychiatry.” He attended defendant for about an hour and a half on the night of December 2. He testified that at first defendant was so nervous and upset it was difficult to communicate with him, but after 20 or 30 minutes he began to make such statements as, “They’re after me . . . they will get you . . . trou-. ble at home.” Later he expressed himself .in more complex phrases. He said, “There is someone dead at home and the police should check.” At the end of an hour he was reporting that he had killed his wife and children because they were from outer space. At one time when the hospital radio ceased to play music and began a news broadcast, defendant told Dr. Parmalee that “those voices” were telling him to kill Dr. Par-melee. He was very disturbed by those voices. It was Dr. Parmelee’s opinion, and he so advised the police officers, that defendant “should not be sent to jail and confined”; that he should be put in Cherry Hospital with maximum security. Dr. Parmelee diagnosed defendant’s condition as schizophrenic reaction, paranoid type, with homicidal expression.
*582During the late hours of 2 December 1971, Chief District Court Judge Nowell signed an order “that Albert Cooper be confined to Cherry Hospital for a period of sixty days for the purpose of undergoing psychiatric examination.” After having remained in the Wayne County Memorial Hospital “some four hours,” defendant was taken on a stretcher in a rescue squad truck to Cherry Hospital. Whaley and Captain Flores followed the truck in a police car. Harvell went to defendant’s apartment.
When Lieutenant Harvell arrived at defendant’s apartment at'approximately 8:80 p.m., he found Officer Isler, Mrs. Jackson, arid' her sons outside. The doors were locked, and no one had entered. Harvell helped Mrs. Jackson’s young son through a window, and he opened the front door. Upon entering the apartment, the group came upon a scene of death and destruction,' described in part as follows-:
The apartment “was in a total and complete disarray.” The. tables were turned over; legs were off of chairs and couches; and contents of drawers and closets were scattered around the house. Three legs missing from one of' the tables were those defendant had on his person when Whaley found him in the bowling alley at 8 p.m. Bedclothes covered some of the victims. Albert, the five-year-old, had been put in a pillowcase, “head and all,” and was completely covered. In the living' room, music was playing very loud; the television was not turned on. The front of. the television was covered with masking tape. The light sockets and light switches were also taped. The bodies of Catherine and Pamela were in the living room. Albert’s. body was near a closet. The body of Dawn, the three-year-old, was in the kitchen. The body of Josephine, the baby, was in the bathroom. All were dead, their hands tied behind them, principally with 'electric cords.
Dr. Jack Newton Drummond, Medical Examiner for Wayne County, joined the police at the Cooper apartment at 8:40 p.m. on December 2. In Dr. Drummond’s opinion, Catherine bled to death from severed arteries and veins in her neck; Pamela died of a skull fracture, probably inflicted by a baseball bat;: and Albert, Dawn, and Josephine died of skull fractures, probably inflicted by a hammer. It was his further opinion that all the victims had been dead “one and a half to three hours” when he examined the bodies; that all of them “were within the same state of rigor mortis.” ' ' -'T
*583Dr. Drummond testified that he found in the bathroom of the apartment “a bloody butcher knife on the floor, a hammer and a baseball bat bloody”; that “[t]here was a large puddle of blood on the carpet extending from under [Catherine’s] neck and head,” and that he observed there “were socks on [Catherine’s] hands”; that he found a radio in the refrigerator and records in the washing machine. Dr. Drummond “couldn’t say either way as to whether a person who would create the condition or situation as existed in the Cooper apartment on the night in question [was] a person who did not know right from wrong at the timé that this took place.” All he could say was that the mental condition of the person who did this was “severely disturbed.”
Defendant was admitted to Cherry Hospital on the morning of 3 December 1971 in such a state of agitation that he was put under heavy sedation. He was disoriented except as to place and person, suffering severe thought disorders, and admitting to both auditory and visual hallucinations. Dr. Ladislaw Peter, who was then assistant superintendent of the hospital and regional director for forensic psychiatry and attendant for the forensic unit, examined him on December 4 and thereafter.
On 9 March 1972 Dr. Peter reported to the court that “due to treatment with psychiatric drugs in adequate doses” defendant’s disease, paranoid schizophrenia, was presently in partial remission, and that he was able to stand trial.
At April 1972 Session Judge Cowper conducted a hearing to determine whether defendant had sufficient mental capacity to plead to the bill of indictment and conduct a rational defense. After hearing the testimony of Dr. Peter and statements by defendant’s court-appointed counsel, Judge Cowper found as a fact that at time defendant was suffering from mental disease to such an extent that he could not stand trial or assist counsel in the preparation of his defense. Judge Cowper ordered that defendant “be recommitted [to Cherry Hospital] to remain indefinitely and to receive treatment.”
In an order dated 9 August 1972, signed by Judge Fountain, provided for the return of defendant from Wayne County jail to Cherry Hospital. The record does not show the circumstances leading up to the entry of this order.
Pursuant to a report and discharge summary from Cherry Hospital, signed by Dr. Eugene V. Maynard, Director of the *584Forensic Psychiatric Unit at Cherry Hospital, dated 12 September 1972, defendant was taken from Cherry Hospital to the Wayne County jail. Later he was returned to the Cherry Hospital for “substantial” medication, having regressed while in jail awaiting trial.
Pursuant to a discharge dated 5 October 1972, defendant was sent'from Cherry Hospital to the Wayne County jail. However, the record shows that he was recommitted to Cherry Hospital on 9 October 1972 by order of Judge Fountain. The record does not disclose the circumstances leading up to the . entry of this order. -.
There was no further discharge of defendant from Cherry Hospital. He was classified there “as a boarder only.”-During the trial at 30 October 1972 Session, defendant was transported dáily between the courthouse and Cherry Hospital and received medication at the hospital given under Dr. Maynard’s- supervision.
At 30 October 1972 Session, before pleading, defendant’s counsel again raised the question and asked for a determination of whether defendant was then capable of pleading to the indictment and of conducting a rational defense. To determine this question, Judge Webb conducted a voir dire hearing. The evidence consisted of the testimony of Dr. Peter, who was then the Superintendent of Cherry Hospital, and of Dr. Maynard. Reports previously submitted by each of these psychiatrists were also in evidence. Both agreed that defendant was then able to stand trial, and Judge Webb so found.
In addition to the voir dire to determine defendant’s competency to stand trial, Judge Webb also heard evidence to determine whether defendant’s statements to personnel at the Wayne County Hospital on the night of 2 December 1971 were admissible in evidence. Dr. Peter, Dr. Maynard, and Dr. Parmelee testified on this second voir dire. Dr. Maynard and Dr. Parmalee also testified before the jury. Dr. Peter, however, did not. The record offers no explanation why the defense failed to call him as a witness.
The doctors all agreed that defendant had been and was then suffering from paranoid schizophrenia. In brief summary their descriptions of the characteristics and symptoms of this serious mental disease are narrated below.
*585According to Dr. Maynard: “Paranoid schizophrenia is a mental disease of psychotic depth, that is, of insanity depth. . . . Psychosis simply that the mental functioning of an individual is so impaired as to prevent his meeting the everyday problems of life in an external environment.” Paranoid schizophrenia “is characterized by disorders of thinking, behavior and emotional feeling, often manifested by hallucinations and delusional thinking.” It is characterized by periods of exacerbation and of remission. Exacerbation is an acute schizophrenic episode in which there may be “a complete disorganization of a personality.” Although “[t]here is no heal to schizophrenia,” the disease may be kept in remission by tranquilizing drugs.
According to Dr. Peter: Schizophrenia is characterized by an estrangement of the individual from reality which is sometimes complete. Paranoid means that a person has false ideas, delusions, such as delusions of grandeur and of morbid fears of persecution. There is usually no factual basis for the suspicions of a person who is paranoid, but he cannot be shaken from his delusions by any argument or reason. A paranoid schizophrenic has symptoms of two separate mental disorders simultaneously. A worsening of the condition creates a relapse or exacerbation of the disease. Paranoid schizophrenia is in remission when under control by drugs.
According to Dr. Parmelee: Hallucination is a sensory perception; it is something a person hears, smells, feels, or sees which does not really exist. A delusion is the interpretation of a situation contrary to what is actually happening. A paranoid schizophrenic who is experiencing either delusions or hallucinations is at 'that time out of contact with reality and is not in his right mind.
The testimony summarized below reveals the divergent views of Dr. Peter and Dr. Maynard, the two psychiatrists, and the views of Dr. Parmelee, a medical doctor, with reference to defendant’s mental condition at the time of the homicides and during the time he was in the Wayne County Hospital on December 2.
Dr. Peter, who first saw defendant three days after the homicides, testified that he had “examined him, his background, his medical records, and everything pertinent to his psychiatric evaluation”; that in his opinion “at the time of the alleged offense he [defendant] was not able to exercise his capacity to *586distinguish between right and wrong”; that when a person suffering from paranoid schizophrenia is experiencing either auditory or visual hallucinations he is in a state of relapse, and is less able to distinguish between right and wrong and to understand the nature and consequences of his actions. “It is possible that he knows the nature and character of his act but is not able to distinguish between right and wrong with reference to it. Based on the testimony of the Wayne County Hospital personnel who saw defendant on the night of December 2, Dr. Peter formed the opinion “that at that time he [defendant] was out of contact with reality.”
On voir dire Dr. Peter said: “I am familiar with the M’Naghten rules under the legal concept of insanity. In my opinion on the date that this offense was committed the defendant, because of his mental disease, was unable to decide at that point, apply the rule of right and wrong in this particular case. In my opinion as regards this particular offense he was not able to distinguish between right and wrong and adhere to the right.”
Dr. Maynard, basing his evaluation of defendant upon Dr. Parmelee’s report, hospital records, information from members of the staff, his personal examination and observation of him since 1 June 1972, and other testimony in the case with reference to defendant’s conduct before and after the killings, made the following statements upon voir dire and before the jury:
“I could not give an answer as to whether he was suffering from the disease [paranoid schizophrenia] on the date of the alleged offense. The disease is one of remission and exacerbation. In my opinion on the date of the alleged offenses he did understand the nature and quality and wrongness of his actions.
“I have examined Dr. Peter’s report in which he stated that it was [his] opinion that due to exacerbation of his longstanding mental illness, the defendant at the time of the alleged offense was not able to apply his knowledge of right and wrong and that the alleged offense was the product of his mental illness. I do not agree with that conclusion. Dr. Peter is my superior at Cherry Hospital.”
“It is a frequent thing for psychiatrists to disagree on diagnosis on the same facts and in this case there actually was a disagreement between myself who first saw the defendant in *587June 1972 at which time I had been a psychiatrist for a month and the opinion of Dr. Peter who at the time was acting superintendent of Cherry Hospital and had been a psychiatrist for 32 years.”
“If a person completely believes what imaginary voices are telling him [kill or be killed], he can choose the alternative of being killed.” Dr. Maynard added that, in deciding upon a course of behavior, every person “is presented with alternatives whether he is hallucinating or whether he is not hallucinating”; that it has been his “experience with paranoid schizophrenics that most of them select the correct alternatives.”
Dr. Maynard also testified that in his “psychiatric opinion,” defendant should not go free in society; that most persons suffering with paranoid schizophrenia resist medications; that défendant’s disease was in remission because of drugs, the continued use of which is essential to keep the disease in remission; that if defendant should be returned to uncontrolled living in his community where he is not properly supervised and medicated-it is likely he could commit acts just as violent as those charged in this case; that, in the event of his acquittal, he should be recommitted to Cherry Hospital to protect himself and society “from a possible regression to an active schizophrenic process”; that “an active schizophrenic process can well result in the commission of acts of violence over which the person who is mentally ill has no control.”
In the opinion of Dr. Parmelee a person can be out of touch with reality and simultaneously know right from wrong. He testified: “[I]t is true that as far as he [defendant] was concerned there were voices telling him that his family were from outer space and that he was going to be attacked by them:. . . yet he was capable of feeling that these were wrong, and I. feel that in my opinion he acted according to his own free will in committing these crimes .... I would say that if you and I are told to do something we know better than to do it. I am not suffering from any severe mental disorders to my knowledge. I feel that my response to a command that was completely unreasonable could be judged under the same context as Albert Cooper’s response even though he was suffering from an exacerbation of his disease. I feel that he is still just as capable of refusing to commit an immoral act as a person not suffering from the disease.”
*588The foregoing resumes make it quite clear that, despite their conflicting opinions as to whether defendant had mental capacity to understand what he was doing at the time of the homicides and, if he did, to know what he was doing was wrong, the doctors all agreed that defendant was the victim of a serious mental disease.
In this case, upon each of the five bills of indictment, the State asked for a verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree as a “willful, deliberate and premeditated killing” within the meaning of G.S. 14-17.
In his charge to the jury, after defining each of the elements of first degree murder and of second degree murder, the judge gave instuctions that the burden of proof was on the State to satisfy the jury from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt of every element of the crime before they could find defendant guilty of such crime.
With reference to insanity as a complete defense, the court instructed that the burden of proof was on the defendant to prove to the satisfaction of the jury that he was insane when the alleged crime was committed.
In accord with the indicated prior instructions, near the conclusion of the charge, the court instructed the jury as follows:
“ . . . [I] f you find from the evidence and beyond a reasonable doubt that on or about December 1, 1971, Albert Cooper intentionally and without justification or excuse used either a knife, baseball bat or hammer or any other thing as a deadly weapon thereby proximately . . . causing the victim’s death, and that Albert Cooper intended to kill the victim, and that he acted with malice and premeditation and deliberation, it would be your duty to return a verdict of guilty of first degree murder; however, if you do not so find or have a reasonable doubt as to one or more of these things you will not return a verdict of guilty of first degree murder.
“Now, if you do not find the defendant guilty of first degree murder in any of the bills of indictment you must determine whether he is guilty of second degree murder .... If you find from the evidence and beyond a reasonable doubt that on or about December 1, 1971, Albert Cooper intentionally and with malice and without justification or excuse and using either *589a knife, baseball bat or hammer or any other object as a deadly weapon and attacked the victims, thereby causing the victim’s death, nothing else appearing, it would be your duty to return a verdict of second degree murder; however, if you do not so find or have a reasonable doubt as to one or more of these things you will not return a verdict of second degree murder.
“Now, if on December 1, 1971, you should find and find beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant did commit the acts which I’ve described for you: first degree murder or as [sic] to second degree murder, if you are satisfied that on that date the defendant by reason of his mental disease or defect did not know the nature or quality of his act or did not know the difference between right and wrong at the time and in relation to the matters under investigation, then you would find the defendant not guilty by reason of insanity.
“On the other hand if you should not be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt as to any of the things necessary to find the defendant guilty of either first degree murder or second degree murder, then you should find the defendant not guilty.”
In order to form a specific intent to kill, after premeditation and deliberation, one must have the required mental capacity. A person who is legally insane is devoid of such mental capacity. The instructions place upon the State the burden of establishing beyond a reasonable doubt defendant’s specific intent, after premeditation and deliberation, to kill the deceased. They place upon defendant the burden of establishing to the satisfaction of the jury that defendant was legally insane. These instructions are in conflict. To instruct the jurors to return a verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree if the State has satisfied them beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant intentionally killed the deceased after premeditation and deliberation but not if defendant has satisfied them that he was legally insane, is illogical and can only lead to confusion.
When insanity is pleaded as a complete defense to the charge of murder in the first degree, in which proof of a “willful, deliberate and premeditated killing” is essential, and the commission of the homicide by defendant is judicially admitted, the first issue is whether, by reason of his insanity, defendant is not guilty of the crime charged or of any lesser included criminal offense. If the jury finds that defendant was insane, *590the prosecution fails completely and further consideration becomes unnecessary.
In the absence of a judicial admission that defendant committed the homicide, it would be appropriate to submit as the first issue an issue worded substantially as follows: “Did the defendant kill the deceased?” The burden of proof rests upon the State to establish beyond a reasonable doubt the affirmative of such issue. A negative answer would end the case. If answered in the affirmative, the jury would consider a second issue worded substantially as follows: “If so, was defendant insane when the killing occurred?” Upon this issue, the defendant would have the burden of proving to the satisfaction of the jury that this issue should be answered “Yes”. An affirmative answer to this issue would end the case. If answered in the negative, instructions appropriate to a prosecution in which insanity is not pleaded as a complete defense would be applicable.
In this jurisdiction, there has been no requirement that a defendant specially plead insanity as an affirmative defense. In State v. Potts, 100 N.C. 457, 460, 6 S.E. 657, 658 (1888), the defendant, when arraigned, answered: “I admit the killing, but was insane at the time of the commission thereof; therefore, not guilty.” The trial judged rejected as irrelevant and surplus-age all portions of tendered plea execpt the words, “not guilty.” Holding this ruling “was entirely proper,” this Court stated that, under the plea of not guilty, “every defense to the charge, in repelling, or mitigating and reducing the offense to a lower grade, was admissible.” Accord, State v. Nall, 211 N.C. 61, 188 S.E. 637 (1936), which quotes with approval the above statement in Potts.
In Nall, the defendant, when arraigned, entered a general plea of not guilty. After testifying that the fatal shot was fired by another person, the defendant, through counsel, announced to the court that he pleaded insanity, his plea of not guilty being-based “first, upon the ground that he did not commit the act, and, second, upon the ground that if the jury should find he committed the act, that he was not responsible for the reason that he was insane.” Cf. State v. Sandlin, 156 N.C. 624, 626, 72 S.E. 203, 204 (1911).
Nall is cited in State v. Johnson, 256 N.C. 449, 452, 124 S.E. 2d 126, 128 (1962), but solely with reference to rulings on evidence.
*591There is no reason why a defendant may not enter simultaneously a general plea of not guilty and a plea of not guilty by reason of insanity. A plea of not guilty by reason of insanity does not per se constitute an admission of any of the elements necessary to be established by the State beyond a reasonable doubt as a prerequisite to a verdict of guilty. But cf. State v. Bowser, 214 N.C. 249, 254, 199 S.E. 31, 34 (1938), in which the decisions cited do not seem to support certain of the statements in the opinion.
In State v. Swink, 229 N.C. 123, 125, 47 S.E. 2d 852, 853 (1948), Ervin, J., restated the rule in this jurisdiction as follows : “ [A] n accused is legally insane and exempt from criminal responsibility by reason thereof if he commits an act which would otherwise be punishable as a crime, and at the time of so doing is laboring under such a defect of reason, from disease of the mind, as to be incapable of knowing the nature and quality of the act he is doing, or, if he does know this, incapable of distinguishing between right and wrong in relation to such act.” (Our italics.) Subsequent decisions of this Court are in strict accord: See State v. Potter, 285 N.C. 238, 249, 204 S.E. 2d 649, 656-57 (1974), and cases cited.
When a defendant in a criminal case pleads insanity, the applicable rule with reference to the burden of proof on this issue has been well stated as follows: “Since soundness of mind is the natural and normal conditions of men, everyone is presumed to be sane until the contrary is made to appear. This presumption of sanity applies to persons charged with crime, but it is rebuttable. [Citations omitted.] These considerations give rise to the firmly established rule that the burden of proof upon a plea of insanity in a criminal case rests upon the accused who sets it up. But he is not obliged to establish such plea beyond a reasonable doubt. He is merely required to prove his insanity to the satisfaction of the jury. [Citations omitted.]” State v. Swink, swpra at 125, 47 S.E. 2d at 853.
Prior to the enactment of Chapter 85, Public Laws of 1893, our statute relating to murder and its punishment provided: “Every person who is convicted, in due process of law, of any wilful murder of malice pretense, shall suffer death.” Chapter 25, Section 1057, Code of 1883. Under the Act of 1893, now codified as G.S. 14-17, “[a] murder which shall be perpetrated by means of poison, lying in wait, imprisonment, starving, tor-*592tue, or by any other kind of willful, deliberate and premeditated killing . . . shall be deemed to be murder in the first degree. . . . ” (Our italics.) The intent and effect of the 1893 Act are discussed in State v. Benton, 276 N.C. 641, 657, 174 S.E. 2d 793, 803-04 (1970).
This dissent herein relates solely (1) to homicide cases in which proof beyond a reasonable doubt of a specific intent to kill, formed after premeditation and deliberation, is prerequisite to a conviction for murder in the first degree, and (2) to those homicide cases in which there is substantial evidence that at the time of the homicide defendant had been and was suffering from a recognized serious mental disease and engaged in abnormal behavior characteristic of such disease. If such evidence fails to satisfy the jury that defendant was insane under the rule approved by this Court and therefore completely exempt from criminal responsibility, is such evidence competent for consideration by the jury in determining whether at the time of the alleged homicides he was capable of forming a premeditated and deliberate intent to kill, and whether he did so? If so, was defendant entitled to an instruction to that effect?
Defendant assigns error in the court’s charge “for that nowhere in the charge did the court instruct the jury that it should consider the evidence of the defendant’s mental disease on the matter of premeditation and deliberation.” This assignment presents a serious question, apparently one of first impression in this jurisdiction. A similar question has been considered in homicide cases in which proof of a specific intent to kill, formed after premeditation and deliberation, is prerequisite to conviction for murder in the first degree, and there is substantial evidence the defendant was intoxicated when the crime was committed.
Although voluntary drunkenness is not a legal excuse for crime, when a specific intent to kill, formed after premeditation and deliberation, is an essential element of the first degree murder for which defendant is prosecuted, the fact of intoxication may negate the existence of that intent. State v. Propst, 274 N.C. 62, 71-72, 161 S.E. 2d 560, 567 (1968), and cases cited; State v. Bunn, 283 N.C. 444, 458, 196 S.E. 2d 777, 787 (1973), and cases cited. In State v. Murphy, 157 N.C. 614, 72 S.E. 1075 (1911), Hoke, J. (later C.J.), states: “[S]ince the statute dividing the crime of murder into two degrees [G.S. 14-17] and in cases where it becomes necessary, in order to convict an offender *593of murder in the first degree, to establish that the ‘killing was deliberate and premeditated,’ these terms contain, as an essential element of the crime of murder, ‘a purpose to kill previously-formed after weighing the matter’ (S. v. Banks, 143 N.C. 658; S. v. Dowden, 118 N.C. 1148), a mental process, embodying a specific, definite intent, and if it is shown that an offender, charged with such crime, is so drunk that he is utterly unable to form or entertain this essential purpose he should not be convicted of the higher offense.”
Although a number of jurisdictions adhere strictly to the view that insanity is either a complete defense or no defense at all, the weight of authority now supports the proposition that mental disease short of legal insanity may be considered in determining whether the accused at the time of the alleged homicide was capable of forming a premeditated and deliberate intent to kill, and whether he did so. Pertinent earlier decisions are cited and classified in a footnote to the opinion of Justice Reed in Fisher v. United States, 328 U.S. 463, 473-74, 90 L.Ed. 1382, 1389, 66 S.Ct. 1318, 1323-24 (1946).
In at least three jurisdictions, earlier decisions holding a person is either legally sane and therefore wholly responsible for all his acts, or insane and wholly irresponsible, have been overruled: United States v. Lee, 4 Mackey (DC) 489, 54 Am. Rep. 293 (1885), and District of Columbia cases in accord, were overruled in United States v. Brawner, 471 F. 2d 969 (1972) ; People v. Troche, 206 Cal. 35, 273 P. 767 (1928), app. dismd. 280 U.S. 524, 74 L.Ed. 592, 50 S.Ct. 87 (1929), and California cases in accord, were overruled in subsequent California decisions including People v. Henderson, 60 Cal. 2d 482, 35 Cal. Rptr. 77, 386 P. 2d 677 (1963) ; State v. Maioni, 78 N.J.L. 339, 74 A. 526, 20 Ann. Cas. 204 (1909), and New Jersey cases in accord, were overruled in subsequent New Jersey decisions including State v. Vigliano, 43 N.J. 44, 202 A. 2d 657 (1964).
Later decisions are cited in footnotes 55 through 67 in United States v. Brawner, supra, at 1000-1001, and in Comment Note, 22 A.L.R. 3d 1228, § 7, at 1246. The A.L.R. Comment Note follows the report of People v. Goedecke, 65 Cal. 2d 850, 56 Cal. Rptr. 625, 423 P. 2d 777, 22 A.L.R. 3d 1213 (1967). As indicated, a substantial majority of these decisions support the proposition that evidence of mental disease short of legal insanity is competent for consideration in determining whether the accused at the time of the alleged homicide was capable of *594forming a premeditated and deliberate intent to kill, and whether he did so. The decisions referred to below will suffice to indicate the present majority view.
In Becksted v. People, 133 Colo. 72, 292 P. 2d 189 (1956), this question was presented: “[U]pon trial of the issues raised under the ‘not guilty’ plea is accused entitled to introduce all competent evidence, including that of experts, which is relevant to the question of whether he lacked the mentality to form the specific malicious intent which is an essential ingredient in the crime of first degree murder, namely, the specific intent deliberately and premeditatedly to unlawfully take the life of another?” This question was answered in the affirmative.
In State v. Green, 78 Utah 580, 6 P. 2d 177 (1931), the opinion states: “If the appellant was so afflicted with insanity that he was ‘mentally incapable of deliberating or premeditating, and to entertain malice aforethought, and to form a specific intent to take the life of the deceased, in such event the.jury should not find him guilty of murder in the first degree.’ The language just quoted is the law announced by this court in the case of State v. Anselmo, 46 Utah 137, 148 P. 1071. While the defense urged in the Anselmo Case was intoxication, the law there announced is equally applicable where, as here, the defense of insanity is made an issue.”
In State v. Padilla, 66 N.M. 289, 347 P. 2d 312, 78 A.L.R. 2d 908 (1959), a new trial was awarded because the court failed to instruct the jury that evidence of the defendant’s mental condition and defects was competent for consideration in determining whether defendant had the mental capacity to deliberate the killing. The court noted that its holding was not based on a doctrine of “diminished” or “partial” responsibility. In explanation of the basis therefor, the opinion states: “ [I] t means the allowing of proof of mental derangement short of insanity as evidence of lack of deliberate or premeditated design. In other words is contemplates full responsibility, not partial, but only for the crime actually committed.” Too, the opinion, after referring to New Mexico decisions similar to our State v. Propst, supra, continues: “[T]he question immediately arises as to why there should be a different rule and perhaps a more lenient one with respect to a user of alcohol or drugs than in the case of one who may be afflicted with a mental disease not of his own making. If alcohol or drugs can legally prevent a person from truly *595deliberating, then certainly disease of the mind, which has the same effect, should be given like consideration.”
In State v. Gramenz, 256 Iowa 134, 126 N.W. 2d 285 (1964), the defendant was convicted of murder in the second degree. The Supreme Court of Iowa approved the trial court’s instruction which, under the facts of the case, permitted the jury to consider evidence of defendant’s mental condition on the issues of willfulness, deliberation and premeditation, but rejected defendant’s contention that the jury should have been allowed to consider the evidence of defendant’s mental condition on the elements of malice aforethought and general criminal intent.
Under the present California rule, a person who is suffering from a mental disease that prevents his acting with premeditation and deliberation is not guilty of murder in the first degree. Moreover, when the court is sufficiently advised that the defendant is relying upon evidence of such mental disease to negate the elements of premeditation and deliberation in first degree murder, the court is required without request therefor to instruct the jury as to the legal significance of such evidence. People v. Henderson, supra. It was so held in New Jersey in State v. Vigliano, supra.
In addition to the abnormal behavior of defendant herein, all of the medical testimony tends to show defendant had been and' was suffering from paranoid schizophrenia which, at the time of the homicides, was in a state of exacerbation. Under these circumstances, not withstanding the absence of a specific request therefor by defendant’s counsel, it is my view that defendant was entitled to instructions that this evidence was for consideration by the jury in determining whether the State had proven that the homicides were committed pursuant to a specific intent to kill, formed after premeditation and deliberation. See State v. Propst, supra.
Certain of the cases cited as adhering strictly to the view that “a person is either ‘sane’ and wholly responsible for all his acts, or ‘insane’ and wholly irresponsible,” Weihofen, Mental Disorder as a Criminal Defense, at 177-78 (1954), involved factual situations in which this Court would reach a like result. For example, in State v. Flint, 142 W. Va. 509, 96 S.E. 2d 677 (1957), it was held that the trial court properly excluded the proffered testimony of a psychiatrist to the effect that his examination of defendant disclosed that defendant’s “mental *596age” was not greater than that of an average person of the age of “ten years and eleven months.” Under our decisions such evidence of low mentality would not be competent to establish legal insanity, State v. Shackleford, 232 N.C. 299, 59 S.E. 2d 825 (1950), or to negate the elements of premeditation and deliberation in first degree murder, State v. Scales, 242 N.C. 400, 87 S.E. 2d 916 (1955). The evidence herein with reference to defendant’s mental disease and abnormal behavior characteristic thereof is quite different from testimony tending to show “low mentality.”
As stated above, the rule urged herein relates solely (1) to homicide cases in which proof beyond a reasonable doubt of a specific intent to kill, formed after premeditation and deliberation, is prerequisite to a conviction for murder in the first degree, and (2) to those homicides in which there is substantial evidence that defendant was suffering from a recognized serious mental disease and engaged in abnormal behavior characteristic of such disease. The record here discloses that defendant had been and was a chronic sufferer from paranoid schizophrenia, described by all experts as a serious mental disease of psychotic depth and when in exacerbation characterized by abnormal conduct resulting from hallucinations and delusions.
In my view, there was ample medical and circumstantial evidence from which the jury could have found that, at the time of the homicides, defendant’s disease was in relapse; that he was experiencing an active schizophrenic process, characterized by both visual and auditory hallucinations; and that he was out of touch with reality. It was Dr. Maynard who testified upon cross-examination, “I do know and it is my opinion as an expert that an active schizophrenic process can well result in the commissions of acts of violence over which the person who is mentally ill has no control. I thought this was possible in the case of Albert Cooper.”
For the reasons stated, I vote for a new trial.