California v. Houser
Annotate this CaseDuring a trial on multiple counts of sexual offenses against a child, defense counsel informed the court that he had a doubt as to defendant-appellant Earl Lewis Houser, Jr.'s mental competence to stand trial. The trial court appointed a psychologist to assess defendant's mental competence and to advise the court whether there was substantial evidence that defendant was not competent to stand trial. Following a hearing at which the psychologist testified and was cross-examined by both the prosecution and the defense, the trial court concluded that defendant was mentally competent to stand trial. The trial resumed and defendant was convicted on all counts. Defendant appealed, and the Court of Appeals concluded after its review of the trial court record here and the California Supreme Court's ruling in "California v. Pennington," (66 Cal.2d 508 (1967)) that the threshold question for appeal was whether the expert's testimony was sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt as to defendant's competence and thus triggering his constitutional right to a full competency hearing, not whether defendant was or was not mentally competent. The Court concluded the evidence was sufficient to raise such a doubt. Because a trial court had “no power to proceed with the trial once a doubt arises as to the sanity of the defendant,” the error was prejudicial per se and warranted reversal of the conviction.
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