This appeal is from a conviction for attempted abortion. D.C.Code § 22-201 (1961).
The principal question raised is an evidentiary one. The complaining witness Jo Ann Copeland charged the appellant-defendant with having attempted an abortion on her, and testified in some detail about the alleged attempt аnd her removal to a hospital in a desperate condition. 1 On cross-examination- Mrs. Copeland was confronted with several prior inconsistent explanations which *724 she admitted giving to various persons of the causes of her condition, e. g., that she had fallen down a flight of stairs, that she had undertaken a self-inducеd abortion, and so forth. She was also cross-examined intensively regarding a prior consistent statement, made at the hospital, inculpating Mrs. Copes, and defense counsel suggested to her at least three motives which might have induced her to fabricate the statement: (a) desire for freedom from police harassment, (b) desire to receive medical treatment, (e) desire to protect her husband. On redirect examination, Government counsel elicited testimony from her that she had made some of her prior inconsistent statements as to the cause of her condition because Mrs. Copes had asked her to do so and because she did not want to get Mrs. Copes, who “had been real nice to me,” into trouble. Also, on redirect examination, she testified concerning the circumstances surrounding the making of the prior consistent statement, during which she said that she at that time told the truth “Because I was getting weaker and weaker all the time. I thought I was dying, * * * I figured I was close to death * * She stated further that she did not want to die with a lie on her soul. Defense counsel did not object to this, and, on recross-examination, intensively explored the witness’ motive for having given the statement in the hospital, which accused the defendant of having caused her cоndition.
Before defense counsel had completed his initial cross-examination, but after he had elicited the fact that a prior consistent statement had been made and had suggested that the motive for it was to shield her husband, the prosecution called to the stand Dr. Hirsch, the attending physician at the hospitаl. Over objection, Dr. Hirsch testified that Mrs. Copeland had in his presence identified appellant as the person who had attempted the abortion, that he had told her that she was severely ill and that “we would-n’t guarantee what was going to happen.” The doctor testified that he “couldn’t recall exactly the wоrds that we used,” but that he “thought personally she was going to die.” Subsequent to this, and after Mrs. Copeland’s testimony had been completed, Detective Buch, also over defense counsel’s objection, testified that he had been present and had heard the same statement by Mrs. Copeland, and said “At this time Dr. Hirsch told Mrs. Copeland she was dying, and at this time she said she knew she was dying, and she said she wanted to tell the truth of what happened.” Both Dr. Hirsch and Detective Buch testified that the appellant-defendant was present when the prosecutrix made the statement accusing her and that she immediately denied the accusation.
The appellant urges that it was prejudicial error to allow Dr. Hirsch and Detective Buch to testify before the jury as to the statements made to them by the complaining witness which were consistent with her trial testimony. We think it was not error under the special circumstances present here, for reasons now to be explained.
In his cross-examination of the complaining witness defense counsel introduced the subject of a prior consistent statement by eliciting admissions from her that she had made prior consistent statements, as well as prior inconsistent statements. He did not object when the prosecutor on redirect examination askеd her to testify — with reference to her accusation at the hospital — that she then told the truth because she feared impending death.
2
3 Furthermore, defense counsel, on his cross-examination of the prosecutrix, had suggested that the complaining witness had a motive to lie, in accusing Mrs. Copes. His cross-expmination thus directly raised issues for the jury as to the credibility of the testimony of the
*725
complaining witness,, and as to her true motive in making the prior statement in the hospital, as well as the inconsistent ones. Certainly in these circumstances it was open to the prosecution to offer the testimony of other persons, who werе present along with the accused defendant when the prior consistent statement was made, indicating the content of the statement and the circumstances under which it was made. Such testimony was plainly relevant and proper to an evaluation of the credibility of the prosecuting witness which was under attaсk. See Harris v. United States,
The questioned testimony was also relevant and proper to an evaluation of her motive for making the prior сonsistent statement, her motive having been put in issue by the defense. The testimony of the doctor and Detective Buch showed the condition of the declarant and, if believed, tended to confirm that she thought that she was near death at the time.
4
Their testimony could be construed by the jury, if credited, as an indication that her accusation of the defendant and her testimony at the trial were not mere recent fabrications.
5
In this connection, it is important to note that the inconsistent statements and the consistent statement were close together in point of time. The first of the inconsistent statements was made two days after the attempted abortion, others were given on the two succeeding days, and, according to the prosecutrix, they were lies, told at the direction and request of Mrs. Copes for the purpose of protecting her. The accusatory consistent statement in the hospital was made on the fifth day after the attemрted abortion, at a time when the condition of the prosecutrix had grown more serious, and she and her attending doctor believed that she would die. It is further to be noted that the independent witnesses did not suggest in any way that the declaration they heard implicating the defendant was true.
6
And it is of great significance that the аccusatory statement was made in the presence of
*726
the accused, who promptly denied it, and that the doctor and the detective testified as to this. The jury thus had before it the statement of the accuser, the circumstances in which it was made, and the spontaneous denial of the accusation by the accused. Finally, the declarant was available and was subjected to extensive cross-examination both as to her testimony and as to all prior statements made by her. See Baber v. United States,
We are not persuaded by Conrad v. Griffey,
Although the District Court did not specifically instruct the jury that they were to treat the testimony of the *727 doctor and the detective, insofar as they related what they heard Mrs. Copeland say in the hospital, as bearing only on the credibility of Mrs. Copeland as a witness before them and not аs proof of the guilt of Mrs. Copes, such an instruction was not requested either before or after the District Court gave its charge, and the failure to give it has not been asserted as error here. In any event, the charge of the District Court included clear and emphatic instructions on the need for the jury to weigh and evaluate the testimony of each witness in the light of all factors, including motives and inconsistencies. We believe that this was an adequate instruction with respect to the prosecutrix’ credibility in the light of the circumstances here. The jury not only had heard testimony as to the prompt denial by the defendant of the accusаtory declaration but the declarant was available and was subjected to extensive cross-examination as to her prior statements, including the consistent statement. The danger that the jury might have treated the hearsay testimony as proof of the truth of the declarant’s statement, instead of merely evidenсe supporting her credibility, is greatly minimized. It appears further that the point as to her credibility was extensively argued in the summations. 9 In the circumstances we cannot say that the District Court committed plain error in its instructions.
In view of the special circumstances of this case, we need not reach the further question аs to the necessity generally for a limiting instruction, and intimate no opinion on that subject. We note only the views expressed in United States v. De Sisto,
“The rule limiting the use of prior statements by a witness subject to cross-exаmination to their effect on his credibility has been described by eminent scholars and judges as ‘pious fraud,’ ‘artificial,’ ‘basically misguided,’ ‘mere verbal ritual,’ and an anachronism ‘that still impede(s) our pursuit of the truth.’ ” 10
Finally, we point out that the law with respect to the admissibility of prior consistent declarations in general has undergonе considerable liberalization in recent years. Cf. United States v. Apuzzo,
*728 We have examined the other contentions made by able court-appointed counsel, and find no error affecting substantial rights.
For these reasons, the judgment of conviction will be
Affirmed.
FAHY, Circuit Judge, concurs in the result.
Notes
. Concedely, it was proper on redirect to explain and complete her testimony on cross-examination. Zacher v. United States,
. In the
Leggett
case it was said,
“exceptions arise where the credibility of the witness is impugned by the suggestion or contention that his story is one of rеcent fabrication or that it differs from accounts previously given by him or that he has a motive for testifying falsely. * * *
“The decisions following the established rule are in agreement in holding that proof of prior consistent statements is not admissible unless and until there has been some impeachment Of the witness of the nature above referred to * * (Emphasis added.)
. Although the “dying declaratiоn” exception to the hearsay rule may not be strictly applicable, since the declarant is alive, nevertheless the rationale of that exception — that fear of impending death is a stimulus to truth-telling — suggests a possible motive for her statement, which the prosecution was entitled to elicit in rebuttal to suggеstions of motives to lie. See, generally, McCormick, Evidence 555-60 (1954).
.
Cf.
People v. Singer,
. In the hospital and at the trial, the complainant described the manner in which she alleged the attempted abortion was made. The attending physician, at the trial, testified that the patient’s condition might have been caused by a procedure suсh as that described by the complainant.
. In the
Conrad
case, a civil suit, the evidence of a witness (not a party to the suit) was presented to the jury by the plaintiff only by way of answers to interrogatories (referred to in the opinion as a deposition). The declarant was not available for cross-examination beforе the jury, and apparently had not been cross-examined when the interrogatories were answered. Thus, unlike this case, the declarant’s “testimony” (answers to interrogatories) was not tested by cross-examination at the trial. Further, the two prior consistent statements in the
Conrad
case were not introduced initially into the case through cross-examination of the declarant by the opposing party, as is true here. They were introduced by the plaintiff to reinforce the statements made by the deponent, and were made under circumstances (see
.
Cf., e. g.,
State v. Murley,
supra;
State v. Wolf,
. We have been furnished only with the prosecutor’s opening and closing statements to the jury. Their content shows that he argued the .point, and the content of the closing statement indicates that defense counsel also argued the point.
. Citing Morgan,
Hearsay Dangers and the Application of the Hearsay Concept,
62 Harv.L.Rev. 177, 193 (1948); United States ex rel. Ng Kee Wong v. Corsi,
. See Handbook of the National Conference of commissioners on Uniform State Laws 78, 164, 197-98 (1953).
