A jury convicted appellant of rape, 1 statutory rape, 2 corrupting the morals of a minor, 3 and incest. 4 Post-verdict *454 motions were denied and appellant was sentenced to one sentence of three to ten years imprisonment for rape and statutory rape, to a consecutive sentence of one to two years imprisonment for corrupting the morals of a minor, and to pay the costs of prosecution on the incest conviction. On this appeal he argues that the lower court erred 1) in allowing the jury to consider improper evidence; 2) in failing to grant his motion to dismiss certain charges; and 3) in imposing an improper sentence.
The charges against appellant arose from his sexual abuse of his minor daughter. The daughter, who was fifteen years old at the time of the trial, described this abuse as follows. Starting when she was eight or nine years old, appellant forced her to commit oral sodomy on him two or three times a week. The family lived in Berks County at that time. After they moved to Lehigh County, when the daughter was thirteen, appellant forced her to engage in sexual intercourse with him several times a week. The daughter testified that she had often complained about appellant’s abuse of her to her mother but that her mother did nothing about it. She specifically described one incident that occurred on August 16, 1975. Her mother was not at home and appellant came to her room and demanded sexual intercourse. She refused at first but submitted when he threatened to beat her. She also recalled that one other time appellant struck her when she tried to refuse intercourse. On September 23, 1975, she ran away from home and reported appellant’s abuse of her to her maternal grandmother, who the next day informed the police.
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Appellant’s first argument is that the lower court erred in permitting the daughter to describe the prior incidents of sexual abuse, especially those that occurred when she was eight or nine years old and living in Berks County.
Generally, testimony of other criminal conduct by an accused is inadmissible at trial.
Commonwealth v. Spruill,
Since the evidence of appellant’s prior sexual abuse of his daughter fit within this limited exception, the lower court did not err in admitting it.
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Appellant’s second argument is that the lower court erred in refusing to grant his motion to dismiss certain charges under section 3105 of the Crimes Code, which provided: 5
*456 No prosecution may be instituted or maintained under this chapter unless the alleged offense was brought to the notice of public authority within three months of its occurrence or, where the alleged victim was less than 16 years old or otherwise incompetent to make complaint, within three months after a parent, guardian or other competent person specially interested in the victim learns of the offense.
18 Pa.C.S. § 3105.
After the daughter had testified concerning the prior incidents, appellant moved to dismiss all charges concerning any act that had occurred prior to three months before the abuse was reported to police.
See Commonwealth v. Shade,
The jury’s verdict demonstrates that appellant was not convicted for committing an act not “brought to the notice of public authority within three months of its occurrence,” as required by section 3105. Appellant’s claim of error under section 3105 is therefore without merit. His argument that the evidence concerning the prior incidents of sexual abuse should have been excluded because those incidents had occurred more than three months before the complaint is merely a restatement of his first argument that the admission of the evidence was error. We have already held that the evidence of the prior incidents was admissible. Similarly, in Commonwealth v. Bell, supra, the Supreme *457 Court held that the evidence of prior incidents was admissible even though those incidents fell without the statute of limitations.
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Appellant’s final argument is that the lower court erred in sentencing him to serve a separate sentence for corrupting the morals of a minor, consecutive to his sentence for rape and statutory rape. In appellant’s view, the single act of sexual intercourse testified to by his daughter as having taken place on August 16, 1975, was the basis of both the corruption charge and the rape charge, so that he was improperly twice sentenced for the same criminal act.
The question whether one crime merges into another crime for the purposes of imposing sentence must be answered by reference to the facts presented in the individual case.
Commonwealth v. Jackson,
In the present case it is evident that the lower court, in imposing the separate sentences for corruption of the morals of a minor and for rape and statutory rape, took a different view of the record than the view urged upon us by appellant. Specifically, the court, unlike appellant, did not regard the jury’s verdict that appellant was guilty of both offenses as based upon the evidence of the single act of sexual intercourse testified to by appellant’s daughter as having occurred on August 16, 1975, but rather as based upon that evidence and in addition upon the daughter’s testimony that during the three months preceding the
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grandmother’s complaint to the police, appellant had intercourse with her several times a week. In our opinion, the lower court was amply justified in taking such a view of the record. To be sure, it is theoretically possible that the jury believed only the daughter’s testimony about the single act of intercourse on August 16, 1975, and disbelieved her testimony about the other acts. If we knew that that was the jury’s view of the evidence, then a finding of merger would follow, for the act of intercourse and the act of corruption would arise from a single transaction.
Commonwealth v. Cox, supra.
However, in deciding whether merger is required, the court is obliged to interpret the verdict not in the light of theoretical possibilities but rather in the light of common sense. Thus in
Commonwealth v. Morrison, supra,
it was theoretically possible that the verdict of guilty was based solely upon the incident of the infected organ, but a common sense view of the record as a whole was that the fact-finder had found that separate incidents had occurred. As Judge VAN der VOORT has observed for this court, “[w]hat may be an ambiguity in the definitions of actions made criminal will not cloud our applying common sense understanding to the facts.”
Commonwealth v. Romanoff,
What has just been said is consistent with the rule that the sentence imposed on a criminal conviction must conform to the verdict.
See Commonwealth v. Doman,
Affirmed.
Notes
. 18 Pa.C.S. § 3121.
. 18 Pa.C.S. § 3122.
. 18 Pa.C.S. § 3125.
. 18 Pa.C.S. § 4302.
. On May 18, 1976 this section was amended to provide:
Prompt reporting to public authority is not required in a prosecution under this chapter: Provided, however, That nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit a defendant from introducing *456 evidence of the alleged victim’s failure to promptly report the crime if such evidence would be admissible pursuant to the rules of evidence.
18 Pa.C.S. § 3105, as amended, May 18, 1976, effective thirty days after amendment.
