“A greater latitude of proof as to other like occurrences is allowed in cases of sexual crimes.” This was said by this court in a rape case. 1 In that case this court held admissible testimony as to an earlier incident in which the defendant had gone to the room where the complaining witness and another girl were sleeping and gotten into bed with them. This court termed such earlier incident “a grossly indecent assault on both.” 2
Such greater latitude of proof as to other like occurrences is evident in other Wisconsin cases. In an assault to commit rape, where the trial court admitted testimony of the little girl involved as to the accused taking indecent liberties with her person a short time prior to the time in question, this court held: “Such evidence was clearly admissible,
as tending to prove the motive and intent
of the accused in doing the acts complained of. ...”
3
(Emphasis supplied.) In a statutory rape case, where the trial court admitted evidence of violations of the girl by the accused other than the particular one for which he was on trial, this court held: “. . . it was proper to permit proof of other violations of her by the accused, than the one for which he was on
A “greater latitude of proof as to other like occurrences” is clearly evident in Wisconsin cases dealing with sex crimes, particularly those involving incest and indecent liberties with a minor child. This is not so much a matter of relaxing the general rule that it is not competent in a prosecution for one crime to introduce evidence of other offenses 9 as it is a matter of placing testimony concerning other acts or incidents within one of the well established exceptions to such rule, as noted in Whitty, 10 and codified in the new Wisconsin Rules of Evidence. 11
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Proper v. State
(1893),
Id. at page 630.
Grabowski v. State
(1905),
Lanphere v. State
(1902),
Gundlach v. State
(1924),
State v. Mitchell
(1948),
Whitty v. State
(1967),
State v. Midell
(1968),
Id. at page 737, this court stating: “. . . This is a familiar problem and in Whitty v. State, this court thoroughly reexamined the fundamental rules underlying the admissibility of evidence of prior crimes, incidents or occurrences. The court made it clear that such evidence is not admitted for purposes of proving general character, criminal propensity or general disposition on the issue of guilt or innocence . . . .”
See: footnote 7.
Rule 904.04 (2), Wisconsin Eules of Evidence (effective January 1, 1974) provides: Other crimes, wrongs, or acts. Evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not admissible to prove the character of a person in order to show that he acted in conformity therewith. This subsection does not exclude the evidence when offered for other purposes such as proof of motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident.”
See: People v. Covert
(1967),
People v. Covert, supra, at page 88, the court adding: “. . . The offense [incest with daughter] almost always occurs in private. The only direct witnesses are the prosecuting witness and the defendant. Although circumstantial evidence supplies occasional corroboration, conviction usually hinges upon the credibility of the prosecuting witness. In this kind of case beyond any other, the defendant’s plea of innocence challenges the credibility' of the alleged victim. . . . Standing alone, the implicit challenge to the credibility of the prosecuting witness creates relevance for evidence of similar sex offenses upon other persons.”
Grabowski v. State, supra, footnote 3.
See: State v. Jackson
(1948),
State v. Jackson, supra,
at page 322, quoting
State v. Moore
(1948),
“. . . It is true that the evidence tends to prove habitual moral degeneracy and lascivious conduct toward persons other than the prosecuting witness, but the same filial relationship exists between these persons and the defendant, as exists between the prosecuting witness and the defendant — father and daughter. It is this relationship in the case at bar which marks the gravamen of the offense and constitutes the ‘logical connection’ between the acts of incest with different persons.”
Staggers v. State
(1969),
