426 Mass. 301 | Mass. | 1997
The defendant, Gerald Walker, was convicted of indecent assault and battery of two children, whom we shall
1. On a weekend in mid-July, 1990, Walker, a cousin to Mary and Jane, acted as the baby-sitter for the two girls while Mary’s parents were away for four days. Four indictments charged Walker with forcible rape of a child under sixteen years of age, pursuant to G. L. c. 265, § 22A, arising from Mary’s accusation that Walker had anal intercourse with her on four occasions that weekend in four different rooms of the house. Two indictments pursuant to G. L. c. 265, § 22A, charged Walker with the forcible rape of Jane, based on her accusation that Walker subjected her to anal intercourse that same weekend in the basement of Mary’s house and on another occasion in her own home.
Within several weeks, the girls talked about the incidents with a fourteen year old relative, who reported the incidents to her mother. The mother informed Mary’s father. Jane also told her mother of the second incident on the morning after it had occurred. On August 23, 1990, Jane made a statement to a State trooper.
2. On the indictments for rape, the judge, sua sponte,
A defendant may properly be convicted of one crime, “though not expressly charged with that precise crime, if it is a lesser included offense of the crime” charged. Commonwealth v. Schuchardt, 408 Mass. 347, 351 (1990). “[Ljesser included offenses are those necessarily included in the offense as charged.” Ariel A. v. Commonwealth, 420 Mass. 281, 285 (1995), quoting Commonwealth v. Sherry, 386 Mass. 682, 694 (1982). We have held that assault and battery is a lesser included offense of the crime of rape. See Commonwealth v. Richmond, 379 Mass. 557, 562 (1980), and cases cited. We also have “assum[edj” that indecent assault and battery on child under fourteen years of age is a lesser included offense of forcible rape of a child under sixteen years of age, because “indecent assault and battery is merely an aggravated form of simple assault and battery, and the element of indecency necessarily inheres in the concept of rape.” Commonwealth v. Egerton, 396 Mass. 499, 503 n.3 (1986).
We observe first that the age element in the lesser included offense may be different from, but is not in addition to, the age element in the greater offense. Proving the age of the lesser offense proves it also for the greater offense, even though the converse may not always be true.* **
Walker draws our attention to an important competing policy, that a defendant is entitled to notice of each alleged fact or element of the offense charged. See Commonwealth v. Burns, 8 Mass. App. Ct. 194, 196 (1979). “Where an indictment has failed to charge a crime because it lacks an essential ingredient of the crime sought to be charged the court has no jurisdiction to convict the defendant.” Id. at 196. This policy has also been analyzed as a due process issue: “to be charged under one statute and convicted of a totally separate crime under a different statute poses grave problems in the light of the Due Process requirement that a defendant be given notice of the charges against him and an opportunity to defend himself.” Commonwealth v. Eaton, 2 Mass. App. Ct. 113, 117 (1974). In this case, however, the defendant had sufficient notice in the indictments of the substantive elements of the crimes alleged: his conduct and that the victims were children. The failure to allege the children’s ages in the indictment did not deprive Walker of notice of the lesser included crimes of which he was convicted,
We think it advisable in the future that the Commonwealth perfect indictments of this kind by noting whether the age of the victim is under fourteen years. Nonetheless, we hold that in
3. Walker’s second issue on appeal is whether the judge erred in denying him an opportunity to conduct a voir dire examination of Mary on an allegation of prior sexual abuse. On the first day of trial, Walker filed a motion in limine requesting allowance to cross-examine Mary and other witnesses concerning an allegation that she had been sexually assaulted by her father, prior to the incidents involving Walker. In the alternative, Walker requested that he be allowed to conduct a voir dire hearing on this issue. The judge denied his motion. The basis for Walker’s request was a single reference contained in a Department of Social Services document, among voluminous department records concerning Mary, to a statement made by Mary’s father that Mary’s natural mother had accused him of sexually molesting Mary. The Commonwealth objected, and made the judge aware that Mary had been the object of a bitter custody fight in New York between her parents, that the father had been awarded custody after numerous hearings, that the mother had been found in contempt three times by the New York court, that the mother was addicted to drugs and, at the time of Walker’s trial, that she could not be located. The mother had made the sexual abuse accusation against Mary’s father in the context of the custody dispute over Mary.
We have held that in challenging the reliability of a child’s testimony about sexual abuse, a defendant has a right to show that the child had personal knowledge of sexual acts and terminology from sexual abuse prior to the incidents alleged against a defendant. Commonwealth v. Ruffen, 399 Mass. 811, 815 (1987). The defendant must have a reasonable suspicion and a good faith basis for the inquiry. Id. We have suggested that a judge, given such a reasonable suspicion and good faith basis, should permit a voir dire examination to determine whether a child had been a victim of sexual abuse in the past. Id. Before any such evidence is admitted, the judge should determine both that the past abuse is factually similar to the abuse in the case on trial and that the child victim displays knowledge of sexual matters beyond his or her years. Commonwealth v. Rathburn, 26 Mass. App. Ct. 699, 707 (1988), citing Ruffen, supra.
It is one thing to recognize that, because a child has experienced prior sexual abuse, she has an alternative source of personal information that may, in turn, account for her ability to describe sexual activity in testimony against a defendant. Such evidence may be relevant to the child’s reliability as a witness or may rebut a presumption that a child would have no knowledge of such matters, absent the experience with the defendant. Far less relevant is a defendant’s showing that a parent or someone else may have transmitted to a child information about sexuality, even if she acquired such information in the context of another, in this case apparently groundless, accusation of sexual abuse. While another case may arise in which a child’s indirect knowledge about sexuality based on information from a secondary source is more relevant to the defense than here, in this case we place “reliance on the trial judge’s personal observations of the victim and his ability to assess her maturity based upon her sophistication, exposure to life experiences and mental capacity.” Rathburn, supra at 708.
In relying on the judge’s assessment of the victim, on his concern to protect the victim from embarrassment and intrusion on her and her father’s privacy, and on his weighing of the potential relevance against the potential prejudice of the matter
4. The third issue appealed from is the judge’s refusal to allow Walker to use a social worker’s report to refresh Mary’s recollection during cross-examination. On this issue, we endorse the Appeals Court decision, 42 Mass. App. Ct. 14, for the reasons stated therein, id. at 19, and affirm the ruling of the trial judge.
Judgments affirmed.
Jane initially testified that Walker put his penis in her “butt,” but subsequently testified that his penis had not actually penetrated her, but had rubbed against her. Based on this testimony, the judge allowed so much of Walker’s motion that called for a finding of not guilty as charged rape or statutory rape, but denied Walker’s motion on a required finding of not guilty as to a “lesser included offense” of indecent assault and battery.
In Commonwealth v. Egerton, 396 Mass. 499 (1986), the defendant appealed from the denial of his request to charge the jury on G. L. c. 265, § 13B, as a lesser included offense of G. L. c. 265, § 22A, the converse of the question presented to us in this appeal. Id. at 502-505. After “assuming” that G. L. c. 265, § 13B, was a lesser included offense of G. L. c. 265, § 22A, we concluded that there was sufficient evidence of the defendant’s intent to rape the victim to support the judge’s refusal to charge on indecent assault and battery of a child under fourteen. Id. at 504-505.
At the time Egerton was decided, the victim’s lack of consent was also an element common to both crimes. Statute 1986, c. 187, later amended G. L.
The Appeals Court apparently tried to capture this logic in framing the question as “whether all the elements of the lesser offense are included within the greater offense” (emphasis in original). Commonwealth v. Walker, 42 Mass. App. Ct. 14, 16 (1997). The Appeals Court continued that this court has on occasion “used different expressions, including that proposed by the defendant” but that we have “never done so in a context where the difference mattered, as in the case before us.” Id. at 17 n.6.
Walker was able to discover the names and ages of the children through his discovery pleadings. The girls were a cousin and family friend known to him in any event. There is not even a remote possibility that Walker did not have notice that the children were under fourteen years of age.
Defense counsel informed the judge that his purpose was not to establish proof of the prior sexual abuse of Mary, but to show that because of the mother’s accusations, Mary may have gained knowledge of sexual matters prior to the incidents with Walker.
A similar request by Walker regarding inquiry at trial into prior sexual abuse of Jane, where there was more substantial information that the abuse had occurred, was agreed to by the Commonwealth and allowed by the judge.