dissenting:
I disagree with the majority of the court: I believe the trial court’s action regarding the preliminary hearing was erroneous, prejudicial and constituted reversible error. Furthermore, I am not satisfied the evidence is sufficient to establish the guilt of the defendants beyond a reasonable doubt.
With respect to the preliminary hearing, it seems to me that the issue presented on this appeal has a somewhat different dimension than that discussed in the majority opinion. The basic issue presented by this appeal is whether the defendants were entitled to a preliminary hearing and if so whether the action of the prosecution and trial court erroneously prevented the defendants from having such a hearing.
The defendants first appeared in court on November 13, 1970, having been arrested pursuant to complaint filed November 10, 1970. According to the docket entry, the court explained their rights and continued the case until November 24. Whether defendants were advised on Novmber
13 of their right to have a preliminary hearing or whether the case was continued for that purpose does not appear of record and in any event is immaterial to the issue raised on this appeal.
However, what transpired on November 24 is of critical importance in considering the merits of defendants’ claims. It is undisputed that notice of motion to hold preliminary hearing on November 24, 1970, the date to which the cause had been continued, was served on the State’s Attorney on November 19, 1970. The remaining essential facts are disclosed by the colloquy between defense counsel, judge and assistant State’s Attorney on the morning of November 24. A motion was filed by the assistant State’s Attorney for continuance on the morning of November 24. It appears from the statements of the assistant State’s Attorney that prior arrangements for the continuance may have been made between court and assistant State’s Attorney without notice to defense counsel. Although there was some vague references by the assistant State’s Attorney to other cases as a basis for his request for a continuance, it appears that such cases had been “scratched off” the calendar. The trial judge did not at any time indicate that a hearing could not be conveniently held on November 24 and even refused to consider the possibility of holding a hearing earlier than December 10, 1970, the date being selected over the objction of defense counsel. In arguing that the preliminary hearing should be held on November 24, Wallace, an attorney for one of the defendants, insisted, “The State’s Attorney’s Office refused to give a preliminary hearing. They do all sorts of maneuvering to do away with a preliminary hearing. The law I feel in this case is being openly flaunted by the State’s Attorney’s office.” Later he declared, “In regard to procedure. In Rock Island County you can’t get a preliminary hearing.”
In their argument during the November 24th hearing, in their December 3 motion for immediate preliminary hearing, and, in their motion of December 18 to dismiss the indictment, the defendants alleged and such allegation was never denied, that preliminary hearings were not held in Rock Island County, because according to the view of the State’s Attorney, approved by the courts, preliminary hearings were not considered critical stages in the criminal prosecution and hence not required. It was also undenied that continuances were granted which had the effect and purpose of scheduling hearings beyond when the case was expected to have been presented to the grand jury. Indeed, in its brief, the only position taken upon this issue by the State is that the court is not required to afford a defendant a preliminary hearing. According to the State, since a hearing is not required it is immaterial whether the defendant is prevented from having such a hearing either by continuances or otherwise.
The major thrust of the majority opinion is that the delay of about one month was “reasonable” yet nowhere in its brief does the State even mention the term “reasonable” or claim that the court’s action was in any way governed by or based upon any rule of reasonableness.
Although this problem may have constitutional overtones, the principal issue involves the application of parts of section 109, chapter 38, Ill. Rev. Stat. 1969. By the terms of Section 109 — 1(a), a person arrested “* * * shall be taken without unnecessary delay before, the nearest and most accessible judge * # According to Section 109 — 1(b),
“The judge shall:
(1) Inform the defendant of the charge against him and shall provide him with a copy of the charge.
(2) Advise the defendant of his right to counsel and if indigent shall appoint a public defender or licensed attorney at law of this State to represent him in accordance with the provisions of Section 113 — 3 of this Code.
(3) Hold a preliminary hearing in those cases where the judge is without jurisdiction to try the offense; and
(4) Admit the defendant to bail in accordance with the provisions of Article 110 of this Code.”
It should be observed that the language of the statute is mandatory and the duties which the court “shall” perform are clearly specified. That the statute imposes a duty to hold a preliminary hearing, just as it requires the court to advise the defendant of the charges, his rights and the appointment of counsel for him if indigent, is, I believe, inescapable from the language of the statute itself.
Contrary to the assertion of the prosecution, such cases as People v. Adams, 46 Ill.2d 200, 263 N.E.2d 490; People v. Bonner, 37 Ill.2d 553, 229 N.E.2d 527; and People v. Petruso, 35 Ill.2d 578, 221 N.E.2d 276, do not affect the duty to hold the preliminary hearing provided in Section 109— 1(b)(3) nor do they hold either directly or by necessary implication that the defendant is not entitled to a preliminary hearing. In observing as does the Adams case, that a preliminary hearing is “not a required step in the process of prosecution, as a prosecutor may seek an indictment from the grand jury, thereby eliminating the proceeding”, the court is merely observing that a prior charge, arrest and preliminary hearing are not conditions precedent to the return of an indictment. In other words the prosecution is not “required” to first arrest a person accused of a crime before presenting the case to the grand jury and seeking an indictment. However, in the large majority of cases, the person accused of crime is first arrested and charged before an indictment is sought and under such circumstances section 109 — 1(b)(3) and 109 — 3 are applicable. In so far as the determination of whether probable cause exists for believing a criminal offense has been committed and believing that the person accused thereof committed such offense, one of the principal purposes of a preliminary hearing is to prevent the unjustified detention of a person charged with a criminal offense.
The majority of the court and I reached the same conclusion regarding the duty imposed by statute to hold a preliminary hearing as soon as reasonably practicable and without unreasonable delay and to that extent I concur in the observations in the majority opinion. However, by emphasizing a quotation selected from Adams, it appears that the majority has not unconditionally approved or applied the statutory duty and seems to suggest that perhaps the diligence to be exercised is somewhat lessened when the procedure is characterized as “not required” in another frame of reference, i.e., whether the right of representation should be given retro-active effect.
Discussing the scope, function and importance of a preliminary hearing and in particular the lawyer’s relation thereto, the court in People v. Adams, 46 Ill.2d 200, 263 N.E.2d 490, quotes the following with approval from the case of Coleman v. Alabama, 399 U.S. 1, 90 S.Ct. 1999, 26 L.Ed.2d 387,
“First, the lawyer’s skilled examination and cross-examination of witnesses may expose fatal weaknesses in the State’s case, that may lead tire magistrate to refuse to bind the accused over. Second, in any event, the skilled interrogation of witnesses by an experienced lawyer can fashion a vital impeachment tool for use in cross-examination of the State’s witnesses at the trial, or preserve testimony favorable to the accused of a witness who does not appear at the trial. Third, trained counsel can more effectively discover the case the State has against his client and malee possible the preparation of a proper defense to meet that case at the trial. Fourth, counsel can also be influential at the preliminary hearing in making effective arguments for the accused on such matters as the necessity for an early psychiatric examination or bail.”
In addition, section 109 — 3 describes other functions of the preliminary hearing, including the perpetuation of testimony for either the prosecution or the defense and means to secure the attendance of witnesses for the prosecution or defense at any future trial.
While it may be a primary function of a preliminary hearing to determine whether the defendant should be further held to answer the charges, the incidental effects are significant and offer additional justification for requiring the trial court to provide such a hearing, at least when there is reasonable opportunity to do so prior to indictment. The Illinois Constitution of 1970 in article 1, section 7 (not in effect at the time of preliminary hearing conducted in this case) provides that a preliminary hearing shall be held promptly, thereby reinforcing the pre-existing statutory duty.
Since neither the prosecution nor the trial court believed the defendants to be entitled to a preliminary hearing without unreasonable delay, I do not see how it can be said that the facts reasonably justified the court’s action or that the court acted reasonably in accord with the statutory mandate. Even if this aspect of the trial court’s action is ignored, the record reveals an absence of any justification for not holding the preliminary hearing on November 24 and an absence of any facts warranting the conclusion that a continuance of nearly two weeks and a half was reasonable. A delay of nearly a month while the defendants were in jail is, I believe, an unreasonable delay in providing a preliminary hearing in the absence of a showing of any justification, reason or excuse therefore. Under the Federal statutes, 18 U.S.C. § 3060(c), the defendant is entitled to such a preliminary examination within 10 days from the date of the complaint. (United States v. Brumley, 466 F.2d 911.) While the Federal statute is not applicable to this case and does not purport to be an interpretation of the Illinois statute, nevertheless the shortness of the period provided in the Federal statute is instructive.
This brings me to the question of prejudice which may have resulted from the court’s error in not affording defendants a preliminary hearing within a reasonable time. The defendants have charged that if the preliminary hearing had been held and they had learned from the prosecutrix of the existence of a girl named “Candy” who was with the prosecutrix at sometime prior to her entry into the car of her alleged attackers, they might have been able to locate Candy and she might have been helpful as a defense witness. It also appears from the testimony of the prosecutrix and her two girl-friends that Candy was with the prosecutrix in Carlos’ apartment and left with her for the dance. Candy and the prosecutrix were picked up by a friend of Candy’s on the way and proceeded to the place of the dance. Candy left and the prosecutrix stayed about 10 minutes according to her testimony, but apparently saw no one at the dance that she knew. Candy seems to be the only witness able to describe what may have happened after the prosecutrix left Carlos’ apartment and left the dance. The procedure of the court which prevented the defendants from learning of Candy did constitute prejudice. If neither the assistant State’s Attorney nor the prosecutrix knew Candy or knew of her whereabouts at time of trial, such circumstances warrant the conclusion that earlier knowledge of her existence which might have been disclosed at a preliminary hearing would substantially increase the likelihood that she could have been located by the defendants. Furthermore, since she was one of the last persons to have seen the prosecutrix as the latter was leaving the dance, her testimony had the potential of having some bearing on the incident. Whether her testimony would have benefited the defendants or for that matter would have aided the prosecution cannot be ascertained, but it is the inability to ascertain the nature of her potential testimony which constitutes an element of the prejudice resulting from the failure to hold the preliminary hearing.
I believe the defendants were substantially prejudiced by the improper action of the prosecution and the trial court, and since such prejudice cannot be eliminated by a remand, I believe the only alternative should be a reversal of the convictions.
In believing as I do that the evidence is not satisfactory for justifying a conclusion that the defendants were guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, I am primarily concerned with the unsatisfactory nature of the evidence proffered as corroborating evidence that an offense occurred. In People v. Taylor, 48 Ill.2d 91, 268 N.E.2d 865, the court observed:
“The case of People v. Damen, 28 Ill.2d 464, 193 N.E.2d 25, discusses in detail the background and reasons for the admissibility of declarations of a complainant as an exception to the hearsay rule either as spontaneous or unreflecting statements, or, in rape cases, as corroborative statements admitted to foreclose the assumption that a failure to speak out would in effect be evidence of the fact that nothing violent occurred. We held that to be admitted as a spontaneous statement it must not have been made as a result of questions, that to be admitted as corroborative it must have been made without inconsistent or unexplained delay and also not as a result of questions. In Damen the victim had been brutally assaulted and raped, but in her resistance she had succeeded in asking the telephone operator to call the police before the defendant had torn the phone from the wall and beat her over the head with it. When the police arrived and noted the shambles in the apartment and the bleeding and beaten victim they asked, ‘What happened?’ We held her response to be a spontaneous declaration and that under the circumstances the single question, ‘What happened?’ was insufficient to destroy its spontaneity.
In the case before us the girl did not immediately make any explanation or complaint to the fireman. The fireman asked if he could help her. She said she wanted to use the phone. Even in answer to his second question as to whether anything was wrong she still indicated nothing that could be deemed as uncontrolled and spontaneous utterance of outraged feelings as required by Damen.”
The trial court ruled that the statements of the prosecutrix to her girlfriends, Marcia Knapp and Sue Hobbs, were spontaneous declarations in accord with the rule as applied in People v. Damen, 28 Ill.2d 464, 193 N.E.2d 25, rather than impermissible hearsay as the rule was applied in People v. Taylor, 48 Ill.2d 91, 268 N.E.2d 865. An examination of the record persuades me that the alleged statements of the prosecutrix were even less spontaneous in the case at bar then those in the Taylor case.
This case had been tried before and resulted in a mistrial because of a deadlocked jury. During the first trial the prosecutrix and her two girlfriends, Knapp and Hobbs, had testified so that both the prosecution and defense knew in some detail the nature of the testimony which each of the three witnesses might offer. Rather than caHing the prosecutrix as the first witness,, the prosecution called Marcia Knapp as the first witness. She testified to the three girls getting together earlier in the evening, their going to the apartment of Carlos Olivera, the departure of the prosecutrix in the direction of the dance, the return of the prosecutrix to the apartment building and especially she described what took place and what she said after the prosecutrix returned to the apartment.
According to Knapp, the prosecutrix went up the stairs to the second floor apartment of Carlos Olivera, knocked on the door, asked for Carlos but was told by Chot, his brother, that he didn’t know where Carlos was. As the prosecutrix was going back down the stairs, the witness and her companion, Sue Hobbs, called to the prosecutrix to come into the first floor vacant apartment where the girls were. When the witness first saw the prosecutrix in front of the downstairs apartment door, the prosecutrix said, “Oh you guys, you guys”. At this juncture defense counsel objected to the statement of the prosecutrix or any other statements because hearsay and inadmissible and at the same time requested a hearing on the matter outside the presence of the jury which was held. After a preliminary discussion between court and counsel this witness was questioned outside the presence of the jury with particular regard to other statements which the prosecution proposed to elicit from the witness. The objections of the defendants were overruled, the court holding, after considering both the Taylor and Damen cases, that the statements of the prosecutrix were spontaneous.
When the witness resumed her testimony after the jury was recaHed, she testified that after the prosecutrix had made the statement, “Oh you guys, you guys”, that “Sue Hobbs asked her what was wrong and she said, ’Oh, you guys, you guys’ And Sue goes, ‘What?’ and she goes, ‘I can’t teU you or they will kill me,’ Sue goes — Sue said, Who wiU kill you.’ and she says, ‘I can’t teH.’ And then — ”
“STATE: Slow down and talk louder.
A. Then she just broke down, she cried and acted hysterical and she turned toward the waH and she just cried, she couldn’t stop and then she started breathing real hard and she couldn’t stop and she couldn’t talk.
* # *
A. And then she just turned toward the wall and couldn’t talk and just couldn’t stop crying and we finally got her to say something and she told us that she had been raped and we asked her who it was and she said that she had never seen them before * # # ”
Sue Hobbs was called next by the prosecution and her testimony confirmed generally the events which had taken place earlier in the evening including her testimony regarding the return of the prosecutrix to the apartment at about 11:45. She confirmed that the prosecutrix had gone to the second floor apartment and had asked for Carlos and when they (witness and Marcia Knapp) heard the voice of the prosecutrix they called to her. According to this witness, as the prosecutrix was coming down the stairs she said, “Oh you guys, you guys” and repeated the same as she entered the first floor apartment. According to this witness, “She said — I go, ‘What’s wrong?’ and she said, 1 can’t tell you,’ and I go, ‘Why?’ and she goes ‘Because.’ and I go, ‘Why?’ and she goes — she just goes, ‘Oh, you guys, you guys.’ and we go, ‘What’s wrong?’ and she goes, T can’t tell you or they will kill me.’ and we were all looking at her real funny cause we didn’t know what was going on or anything and she broke down and started crying and we kept asking her what was wrong and she wouldn’t tell us and then finally she — .”
According to the testimony of both Knapp and Hobbs the prosecutrix looked pale, her eye shadow was smeared and her shirt was described as wrinkled with the tail pulled out. According to the witnesses she looked as if she might have been crying but otherwise there was nothing unusual about her appearance.
According to the testimony of Debbie Loding, the prosecutrix, concerning what transpired after she returned to the apartment building, she indicated that she ran up to the second floor apartment, knocked, asked for Carlos and was told by Chot he was not there. Hobbs called to her from the downstairs apartment and according to the witness,
“* * * And I was just starting to turn around and Sue opened the door downstairs and she goes, ‘Loding’. And I was scared and I turned around and I just stood there and she goes, ‘Come on in here.’ and I goes downstairs and I couldn’t speak to them.
Q. Why not?
MR. DOUGLAS: I will object to that, Your Honor.
Q. Did you try to say something to them?
A. Well, I couldn’t—
MR. DOUGLAS: Objection, leading.
BY THE COURT: Sustained.
Q. What happened then?
A. Sue kept asking me what was wrong, everybody kept saying, ‘What happened?’
* # #
MR. COLLINSON: Your Honor, for the record, we would object to any conversations that took place between herself and the other persons as being hearsay.
ft ft ft
BY THE COURT: Overruled.
STATE: Go ahead and say what happened.
A. I couldn’t tell them.
MR. DOUGLAS: Objection to the reason, the testimony is before the Court and that is that she said she could not talk.
BY THE COURT: Overruled.
A. I told them I couldn’t tell them because if I told on them they said they would kill me if I did. * * *”
On cross-examination of prosecutrix she was asked;
“Q. Then just as you turned around you were able to look down the stairs and see Sue Hobbs?
A. Well, she — she—well, I wasn’t turned around when she yelled at me, she was talking to me and then I turned around and saw her.
Q. And you were downstairs about five (5) to ten (10) minutes before you said anything about what happened, isn’t that correct?
A. Yes.
Q. And this was only after they asked you a number of times, What happened, what happened?’
A. Yes.”
In the testimony of the prosecutrix and in particular her cross-examination, it can be seen that a period of time elapsed even after the prosecutrix went downstairs and also that many questions were asked. The order of calling the witnesses tended to minimize both the time lag and the questioning which took place and the defendants objection included the failure to present a proper foundation, i.e., the prosecutrix’s own testimony in order to establish the time and chronological relationship between the claimed offense and the events which took place in the apartment. The court ruled that such a foundation was unnecessary but permitted the testimony of the first witness on the basis that the prosecutrix would substantiate the sequence, thereby making the testimony of the first and second witnesses corroborative of a spontaneous declaration. We agree with die trial court that the order of calling witnesses was within the discretion of the prosecution and that the testimony of die prosecutrix was not required before other evidence was presented. However, it is also clear that the order of presenting the witnesses tended to obscure the issue to some extent and once having agreed to admit the evidence of the other witnesses the court could thereafter hardly refuse to receive the testimony of the prosecutrix since a contrary ruling at this stage would have necessitated a second mistrial.
From the foregoing testimony the only reasonable conclusion to be drawn therefrom is that the complaint of rape was elicited, even viewing the evidence most favorably to the prosecution, after numerous questions, a substantial lapse of time, after other opportunities to register her complaint and where the circumstances disclosed opportunity for reflection and action no longer motivated or controlled by prior events.
There is another aspect of this case which disturbs me. I think there is another essential condition which must be shown before an otherwise inadmissible hearsay declaration can have the force of a spontaneous utterance justifying its admission as substantial probative evidence. The rule justifying spontaneous utterances is based on our belief that reliability and veracity are assured by the continuing influence of the prior events. Implicit in the rule is that reliability and veracity are equally dependant upon the circumstances surrounding the complaint or spontaneous declaration, including the actions and conduct of the witnesses based on their response to the complaint. In other words, if the witnesses to the claimed spontaneous utterance do not act or react in a manner consistent with the claim of rape which they are called upon to corroborate, it appears to me that such testimony no longer has any legal effect as corroboration and is insufficient to justify admission of hearsay testimony under the spontaneous utterance rule. In this case initially we have the scene of the declaration as a vacant apartment in which two girlfriends of the prosecutrix have been spending time with their boyfriends. After the claimed declaration is made what do the parties do? The prosecutrix and her two girlfriends go to the home of the prosecutrix but even though her mother was awake nothing whatsover is said about the affair. In fact nothing is said by the prosecutrix or her two girlfriends until Monday evening, three days after the incident occurred, at which time prosecutrix reported the incident to her parents. Even then contact with the police was not made by the prosecutrix or her girlfriends until the following day. Such conduct is, in my opinion, wholly lacking in any basis for importing trust or veracity to the hearsay declarations of the prosecutrix.
Laboratory technicians examined the back seat of the car belonging to Hood, as weU as samples of hair, but were unable to find any evidence corroborating the presence of the prosecutrix in the car or corroborating the fact that intercourse may have taken place on the back seat. Such testimony might be regarded as negative corroboration in the sense the absence of any such evidence, where the same should have been expected, tends to refute the contrary claim of the prosecutrix.
Thus, I believe the purported corroborating testimony of the prosecutrix and her two friends is not a spontaneous utterance within the rule of Taylor. The reasons for applying the rule against such hearsay are even more cogent when the purported corroborating evidence viewed as a whole is inconsistent with and fails to afford any underlying reasons for imputing truthfulness and veracity to such evidence. Since in my view the alleged corroborating evidence was erroneously admitted by the trial court, it seems to me that the evidence is insufficient to warrant the defendants conviction for rape and should be reversed.