Opinion by
The defendant was convicted on separate indictments charging, respectively, sodomy 1 and assault and battery with intent to ravish. He filed motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment, which were refused, and received identical concurrent sentences. These appeals followed.
Both offenses were committed upon a little girl aged six and one-half years, who was described by the trial judge as “very attractive” and “of unusual [mental] capacity for her age.” The perversion committed by the defendant was cunnilingus,
2
in which, of course, this little victim was the pathic. There was a wealth of testimony not only from the victim but from others as to the identity of this defendant, who lured this child into his auto truck. The defendant does not challenge the evidence of identification. He contends that penetration was an essential fact to be proved, and that there was no evidence thereof. In examining this contention the evidence clearly established every possible ingredient of the offense, except that there was no
direct
evidence
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of penetration. In
Commonwealth v.
Donahue,
The defendant was also convicted of assault and battery with intent to ravish, and contends that the evidence was insufficient to establish the commission of that crime. The victim here was six and one-half years of age, and under the common law a child under the age of seven is
conclusively
presumed to have no capacity to commit a crime, and therefore cannot be either a principal, an accomplice or an accessory thereto. She lacked the capacity to commit an assault and battery and likewise lacked the capacity to consent to its commission upon her. See
Commonwealth ex rel. Case v.
Smith,
To constitute the crime of rape there must be penetration, however slight. (Res in re, but entrance in the labia is sufficient: 44 Am. Jur., Rape, §3). Such slight penetration would not necessarily hurt the child, and the completed crime could thus be committed without injury to her. The Commonwealth in its indictment alleged, and the jury found, that there was no penetration. But the question still remained with the jury whether the defendant intended some slight penetration. This question the jury resolved against the defendant, and it was fully justified in the finding.
*629
The defendant cites the case of
Commonwealth v. Jaynes,
Appellant also complains of the court’s charge as to reasonable doubt. This is without merit, for the court charged in almost the exact words of the approved definition in
Commonwealth v. Kluska,
The judgment and sentence in each appeal is affirmed, and it is ordered that the appellant appear in the court below at such time as he may there be called, and that he be by that court committed until he has complied with his sentences, or any part of them which had not been performed at the time each appeal was made a supersedeas.
