State v. Trocke

Taylor, 0.

Defendant was convicted of tbe crime of carnally knowing a female child under tbe age of 18 years. Tbe case has been tried twice. At tbe first trial, tbe jury returned a verdict of guilty, but a motion for a new trial was made and granted. At tbe second trial, tbe jury again returned a verdict of guilty. A motion for a new trial was made and denied and defendant appealed.

Tbe assignments of error challenge; (1) Tbe sufficiency of tbe evidence to sustain tbe verdict; (2) tbe ruling of tbe court in sustaining an objection to a question asked tbe complaining witness, on cross-examination, concerning her testimony before tbe grand jury; (3) tbe refusal of tbe court to give two of the instructions requested by defendant.

1. Tbe testimony is not elevating and we shall not rehearse it. Tbe prosecutrix testified to tbe commission of tbe act charged in tbe indictment, at tbe time therein charged, and to tbe commission of numerous similar acts prior thereto. Her testimony was contradicted by defendant, but, if believed by tbe jury, was sufficient to sustain tbe verdict. State v. Newman, 93 Minn. 393, 101 N. W. 499; State v. *487Johnson, 114 Minn. 493, 131 N. W. 629. She was also corroborated to some extent by the conduct of the defendant.

2. The prosecutrix had testified, on cross-examination, that acts of intercourse had taken place, at intervals, from March until December 28, 1912; that such an act took place on December 28, but that she could not give the specific date on which any other such act took place. She was then asked: “Do you remember what you testified before the grand jury as to dates of [such] intercourse ?” The question was objected to as immaterial and excluded, and the ruling is urged as error. The purpose of the question, as stated by defendant in his brief, was to test the memory of the witness; and the only complaint made is that the ruling unduly restricted his cross-examination. No claim is made that the witness testified differently before the grand jury, nor that the question was asked for the purpose of laying a foundation for impeachment. The defendant, in such a prosecution, is entitled to much latitude in his cross-examination, and the question asked might properly enough have been permitted. The fact that it related to testimony given before the grand jury did not render it inadmissible. 4 Wigmore, Evidence, § 2362. Under the circumstances, however, the admission or exclusion of the testimony rested in the judicial discretion of the trial court. The ruling did not prejudice any of defendant’s substantial rights; and was not reversible error, even if based upon a wrong reason.

3. Besides a request for a directed verdict, defendant presented 11 instructions which he requested the court to give to the jury. Eight of these were given, another was given in substance in the general charge, and two were refused. One of those refused directed the jury to take into consideration, “any credible evidence tending to show an attempt on the part of the prosecutrix or her relatives or representatives to extort money from the defendant.” This was correctly refused for the reason that there was no evidence of any such attempt. The other, of the two refused, requested the court to instruct as follows concerning the testimony of the prosecutrix:

“The jury are warned that it would be dangerous to convict on her testimony, unless they also find that it is sustained by facts and circumstances corroborating it, and such corroboration shonld go to the *488commission of tbe offense and not to tbe defendant’s opportunity to commit it or similar collateral or indirect facts and circumstances.”

Some states, by statute, bave adopted tbe rule that no conviction shall be bad in sucb cases, unless tbe testimony of tbe prosecutrix be corroborated by other evidence tending to show tbe commission of tbe offense, and perhaps some courts apply tbe same rule without statutory authority therefor; but Minnesota, in common with tbe great majority of tbe states, bolds that a conviction for sucb an offense may rest upon tbe uncorroborated testimony of tbe prosecutrix, unless, her testimony be discredited by facts and circumstances casting doubt upon its reliability. It is recognized, however, that tbe character of tbe offense is sucb that there is rarely any direct testimony other than that of the parties themselves; that tbe charge is not only difficult to prove, if true, but is extremely difficult to defend against, even if utterly untrue; and that, where tbe testimony of tbe parties is flatly contradictory, tbe jury should be cautioned to scrutinize, with care, all-the facts and circumstances disclosed at tbe trial, which tend either to corroborate, or to discredit, tbe testimony or claims of tbe one or tbe other. But, as consent is not a defense to sucb a prosecution, tbe rule, applied in prosecutions for rape, that suspicion is cast upon tbe claim of tbe prosecutrix by failure to make an outcry, or to make prompt complaint, or by tbe absence of facts and circumstances which indicate that a struggle has taken place, has no application in sucb cases.

Tbe instruction requested, as framed, is objectionable, in that tbe jury were liable to understand from it that corroboration going to tbe actual commission of tbe offense was essential to justify a conviction. Tbe charge repeatedly called tbe attention of tbe jury to tbe necessity of carefully considering all tbe facts and circumstances, disclosed at. tbe trial, which tended to indicate where tbe truth lay. It is too long to quote, and the cautionary expressions are interspersed throughout its entire length; but tbe following summary of tbe cautions given is sufficient to show that they were ample:

Tbe jury were told, in substance, that, to warrant a conviction, all tbe evidence, when carefully considered and weighed, must produce *489in their minds a settled and abiding conviction, to a moral certainty, of the truth of the charge, and satisfy them beyond a reasonable doubt that every material fact necessary to show defendant’s guilt has been established; that, if they found that the testimony of the prosecutrix was not corroborated, the crime charged required special scrutiny and a careful weighing of the evidence, and of all remote and near circumstances and probabilities, especially if they should find that such testimony is at all improbable or suspicious; that the accusation is easily made and hard to prove, and, perhaps, harder still to disprove, be one ever so innocent; that, as such acts are not committed in the presence of witnesses, it is important that all the attending circumstances be given such weight in corroborating the truth of the charge, or in casting doubt upon the truth of the charge, as they are fairly and reasonably entitled to, when taken in connection with all the evidence in the case; that the jury should give careful consideration to prosecutrix’ subsequent conduct as to complaining of the offense or accusing the defendant, her probable motive in shielding another, and all like testimony as to the probability of the commission by defendant of the act charged; that, in weighing the testimony of the prosecutrix, they must weigh carefully, as affecting her credibility, all testimony tending to show a motive on her part to concoct a false charge against defendant; and that she had admitted acts of immorality with others, which admissions were admitted for the purpose of bearing upon her credibility as a witness, and that, “the testimony of a woman of immoral or unchaste character should be regarded with caution and discrimination, and should be carefully weighed.”

The court, in cautioning the jury, gave as much of the substance of the caution embodied in the instruction requested as defendant was entitled to have given, and properly refused to give the instruction as framed.

Order affirmed.