The defendant appeals from a conviction on an indictment charging him with raping a female child on June 16, 1969. Shortly after the alleged incident the victim described her assailant to the police and was taken to the Boston City Hospital. The sole issue presented involves the admissibility of hospital records under G. L. c. 233, §79.
At the trial, the fifteen year old victim made an in-court identification of the defendant and described the details of the rape. Defence counsel stipulated that the records came from the Boston City Hospital. However, he objected to their admission on the grounds that the records did not refer to “treatment and medical history,” being rather a laboratory test which was prepared for purposes of prosecution, and that since the records did not identify the person who made the laboratory tests, the defendant was therefore denied his constitutional right of confrontation. See art. 12 of the Declaration of Rights of the Massachusetts Constitution.
The hospital records admitted over the defendant’s objection contained the following information, written in longhand: “[the victim’s name] Assault Case 3274 6/18/69 (Taken 6/16/69) Dr. Klein Smear: occ. Sperm seen Saline: occ. Sperm seen Culture: negative.”
Dr. Thomas A. Klein, a gynecologist at the Boston City Hospital, testified that he examined the victim at the hospital on June 16, 1969, and that laboratory tests were made. He further testified that when a record is made as a result of a laboratory examination, a card is kept in the laboratory and that when the record is brought to court, a copy of the *579 card is generally made; that exhibit IB (contested hospital record) “appears to be a copy of such a card”; that he merely took samples on which laboratory tests were later performed. He took the sample from the victim and placed it in a refrigerator in the hospital and did not have personal knowledge of what was done thereafter. He testified that he had no independent recollection of the results of the test and that the results of such tests are not made available to the doctors performing the examination unless specifically requested.
The witness also testified that except for venereal disease detection, the specimens are taken for court appearances; that the records kept on file cards in the laboratory “don’t enter into the treatment of the patient in the hospital so they do not become a part of the patient’s physical chart.”
1. Our decisions have demonstrated liberal interpretation of the statute in the admission of hospital records. G. L. c. 233, § 79. In
Leonard
v.
Boston Elev. Ry.
In
Cowan
v.
McDonell,
In an action for injuries, the portions of an original record of the emergency room reciting the hour at which the plaintiff was admitted to the hospital was admissible as
*580
treatment and medical history even though that fact incidentally was found to have had some bearing on the question of liability.
Cohen
v.
Boston Edison Co.
The recital of injury from inhalation of “illuminating gas” in hospital records was admissible under this section.
Wadsworth
v.
Boston Gas Co.
The contested record contains only medical facts as of the date of examination on June 16, 1969, therefore, the record can be construed as part of the “medical history” of the patient at the Boston City Hospital. The argument urged by the defendant as to the manner the records were kept and lack of personal knowledge on the part of Dr. Klein regarding laboratory tests goes to the weight of the evidence and not its admissibility. See
Wheeler
v.
United States,
2. The defendant contends that the admission of the hospital record is unconstitutional in that it violates his “right to confront the witness against him.” “It is not argued nor could it be, that the constitutional right to confrontation requires that no hearsay evidence can ever be introduced.”
Dutton
v.
Evans,
In
Commonwealth
v.
Pinnick,
The defendant misplaces reliance on
Meunier’s Case,
We conclude that there was no abuse of discretion in the admission of the Boston City Hospital records. Moreover, the hospital laboratory test result showing “sperm” was cumulative evidence in view of the fact that the victim gave birth on March 2, 1970.
3. We do not decide the question whether all information contained in a hospital record which is admissible under the statute may be introduced in evidence against a defendant in a criminal case. See
United States
v.
Johns-Manville Corp.
Judgment affirmed.
