delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellant was convicted of rape in a former trial and on appeal the judgment was reversed.
Contee v. State,
No question of the sufficiency of the evidence of rape is raised in this appeal, and it will suffice to say that there was evidence that it was performed, under threat with a knife, in the presence of an off-duty nurse occupying the same apartment as the prosecuting witness, who was then an out-patient at a mental institution.
The first point raised on this appeal is the refusal of the trial court to ask the jurors upon their voir dire the following questions: “(3) If you considered all the evidence in this case and then had a reasonable doubt as to the guilt of the accused, would you nevertheless vote for conviction because you felt you would be subject to the scorn of your fellow man because you would be voting for the acquittal of a negro accused of raping a white woman ?
“(4) Would the fact that a white woman accuses a negro of a rape of her person so prejudice your mind that you would return a verdict of guilty on less or slighter evidence than if the accusing person was a negro and the defendant was a white man ?”
The trial court did, however, unlike the situation in the prior appeal which caused the reversal and in
Brown v. State,
The matter of the examination of jurors on their
voir dire, to
probe for the possible existence of racial prejudice as a ground for disqualification, has been so recently and so com
*490
pletely discussed that it is unnecessary to deal with it here at length. In
Giles v. State,
The appellant next contends that the transcript of the testimony of the prosecuting witness, taken at the prior trial and transcribed by the Court Stenographer should not have been read to the jury. At the outset of the second trial the State offered the testimony of Dr. Jacob J. Miller, a qualified psychiatrist and the Clinical Director of Northville State Hospital in Michigan, that Nancy Somers, the prosecuting witness, had been permanently committed to said institution by order. of the Probate Court of Wayne County, Michigan, and that she had been adjudicated to be insane by that tribunal. He testified that he had examined her on numerous occasions, the last time being a few days before the trial, and expressed the opinion that she was suffering from mental illness and psychosis, and that she was “incapable at this time”. *491 That she had exhibited suicidal tendencies was only one of the factors on which this opinion was based. He further testified that under the McNaughten rule, with which he was familiar, she was unable to distinguish between right and wrong or to understand the nature and consequences of her acts, and that she “would be legally insane” under that test.
It is well settled that testimony taken at a former trial may be admitted, if it be shown that the witness is dead, insane, or beyond the jurisdiction of the court, or on diligent inquiry cannot be located, or that some other circumstance exists which shows that the witness who gave the testimony at the former trial cannot be procured as a witness at the second trial. This general rule was stated in
Hendrix v. State,
The appellant argues, however, that there was no sufficient predicate laid by way of proof of insanity or unavailability. It is true that the preliminary proof of insanity cannot rest upon mere hearsay that the witness is in a mental institution.
Bielski v. Rising,
On the question of unavailability, the appellant points out that by Maryland Code (1957), Art. 27 sec. 617 et seq. and Michigan Statutes Annotated, sec. 28-1020 et seq., both states have adopted the essential provisions of the uniform act to secure the attendance of witnesses from without a State in criminal proceedings. Hence, he argues that the witness was not beyond the jurisdiction of this State. It may be doubted whether the uniform act extends so far as to authorize the release of any person lawfully in custody, in order to testify in another State. Of course, the act does not extend the jurisdiction of any State, since it is based on comity. In
State v. Jordan,
The appellant’s contention that the trial court abused its discretion in denying a continuance is without merit. Counsel for appellant was sufficiently aware, we think, several months before the trial of the possibility that Nancy Somers might not be able to attend the second trial. His belated motion, after the testimony of Dr. Miller had been completed, for “an opportunity to satisfy itself [the defense] that she is, in effect, mentally incompetent” came too late. Cf.
Hughes v. Averza,
*493
The appellant next contends that the state’s attorney committed reversible error by inquiring into the juvenile court record of the appellant, when the appellant took the stand. When asked if he had been convicted of crime, he replied in the affirmative, and when asked what, if any crimes, he stated “theft”, in 1957. When asked what other crimes, the witness stated that he had been convicted “as a juvenile”. The Court then remarked: “we are not interested in any juvenile records”. The state’s attorney then asked if the appellant had been convicted of auto larceny in 1954. He replied that he had been convicted as a juvenile. Counsel then moved for a mistrial, which the court refused, charging the jury to disregard the question and answer, and striking it out, as having nothing to do with the case. We find no error. Under the circumstances, we think the prompt action of the trial court was enough to remove any prejudicial effect from the minds of the jury. Cf.
Lusby v. State,
Finally, the appellant contends that the state’s attorney was guilty of prejudicial misconduct when he asked the accused, in addition to convictions in 1958, about a criminal conviction in April, 1959, which the state’s attorney did not undertake to prove, after the accused denied it, except by an alleged admission made at the prior trial, which the trial court struck out and told the jury to disregard. The appellant’s counsel then moved for a mistrial, which was denied. We find no abuse of discretion. Cf.
Lusby v. State, supra,
and
Cook v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
