This is a complaint against the defendant in two counts. The first count charged that the defendant “on the 22nd day of October, A. D. 1942, in a public place . . . wherein were great numbers of people, indecently did expose to the view of the said people his body and person naked and uncovered.” The second count was the same as the first, except that the date therein set forth was October 27, 1942. On appeal the case was tried in the Superior Court before a judge and a jury. The defendant moved for a directed verdict of not guilty. This motion was denied and the defendant excepted. The jury returned a verdict of guilty.
There was no error in the denial of the motion for a directed verdict.
The defendant was charged in each count with the common law offence of indecent exposure. Each count followed the statutory form for an indictment or complaint for “Exposure of person.” G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 277, § 79, Schedule of Forms of Pleadings, page 3250.
1. The defendant contends that the evidence did not warrant a verdict of guilty on the first count of the complaint for the reason that there was no evidence that the defendant was seen in the act of exposure by more than one person, a nineteen year old girl.
It is true that there was no such evidence. But such evidence was not essential to support a conviction. In Commonwealth v. Bishop,
We are not convinced that the Bishop case should be overruled. The argument that it should be overruled is not based on the ground that the principle therein stated is not in conformity with proper standards of decency, or on the ground that the principle works injustice to the defendant. Clearly the evidence in either the Bishop case or the present case would have warranted a verdict of guilty of the statutory offence of “open and gross lewdness and lascivious behavior,” G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 272, § 16 — an offence at least closely similar to the common law offence of indecent exposure — if the statutory offence had been charged. Commonwealth v. Wardell,
2. The defendant contends that the evidence applicable to the second count of the complaint did not warrant a finding that the offensive act of the defendant shown by the evidence was intentional on the part of the defendant. Without narrating the evidence it is enough to say that an inference that the act was intentional could properly have been drawn.
Exceptions overruled.
