A MAN snatched an elderly pensioner’s walking stick and beat her to death with it before using it to kill his wife during a “psychotic episode”, a court has heard.

The horrific violent episode erupted just days before Christmas last year in a West Sussex village.

Daniel Appleton, 38, chased his wife Amy out of their home and began to attack her on their driveway on December 22, a court heard.

Good Samaritan passer-by Sandra Seagrave, 76, saw what was happening and hurried over, using her walking stick to assist her.

Despite being less than five feet tall, she bravely intervened by speaking to Appleton in an effort to protect Amy.

The Argus:

Amy Appleton and Sandy Seagrave were killed in Hazel Way, Crawley Down

It was then, prosecutors say, that Appleton – “intent on murder” – turned his aggression towards the vulnerable pensioner and murdered her with her own walking stick.

He then returned to his wife – a beloved schoolteacher aged 32 – and proceeded to bludgeon her to death with it too.

Appleton, of Hazel Way in Crawley Down, denies their murders and appeared in the dock at Hove Crown Court on Monday for trial.

Opening the case, prosecutor Nicholas Corsellis QC said: “Immediately after the attack and as the emergency services arrived on the scene the defendant went back into his home and attempted to commit suicide.

“In the most determined of ways.”

Appleton took a large kitchen knife and stabbed himself at least five times in the chest as well as slashing his thighs seemingly in an effort to cut his femoral arteries.

He also used the knife to slice his own neck, his head, his calf muscle and forearm.

However emergency services were able to save his life and he was eventually charged with the murders.

Mr Corsellis said Appleton, who has no history of criminality or violence, had been experiencing a “psychotic episode”.

The Argus:

Daniel Appleton arrives at court

He told the jury: “However the key question for you in this trial is: was his mental state due to the use of illegal drugs or was it as a result of a temporary mental psychotic breakdown which the defendant is blameless for?”

READ MORE: Trial postponed for Daniel Appleton

He said that samples of the defendant’s hair and nail clippings were tested and traces of a psychoactive substance similar to LSD were found.

Mr Corsellis added: “The defendant accepts that he was responsible, his actions led to the death of his wife and to a passer-by who he had never met before.

“This is not a case of what happened, who did it, but a question of why and the lead up to.”

The trial, which is expected to last several weeks, continues.